CompsognathusMember0 XPNov-23-2013 11:44 AMEpanteris is not included since it's probably a large Allosaurus.
10. Torvosaurus(Amerian Species)- 30 ft long and 2-3 tons

9. Gorgosaurus- 26-30 ft long and 2-3 tons

8. Albertosaurus- 26-33 ft long and 2-3 tons

7. Allosaurus- 26-33 ft long and 2-3.5 tons

6. Lythronax- 26-30 ft long and 2-3.5 tons

5. Saurophaganax- 30-40 ft long and 3-4 tons

4. Daspletosaurus- 30-35 ft long and 3-4.5 tons

3. Siats- 33-36 ft long and 3-5 tons

2 Acrocanthosaurus- 36-40 ft long and 3.5-5.5 tons

1. Tyrannosaurus- 40-50 ft long and 7-12 tons

PS- The positions of Sauro and Das are debatable ;)
Sizes based on my estimates
CompsognathusMember0 XP2013-11-23 11:59:00You already know I agree with your list, so all I can say of it, is that it's very nice. ;)
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CompsognathusMember0 XP2013-11-24 01:17:00I like the list however, I think I would of put Torvo in front of Lythronax because remember Edmarka was probably a Torvo and rivaled Saurophaganax's size in smaller estimates. But that's just what I think, either way good list.
CompsognathusMember0 XP2013-11-24 10:06:00The reason why Torvo is at the lower end of the list is because the American species was not nearly as big as the European one and this list is about North American predators.
CompsognathusMember2 XP2013-11-24 14:15:00I'm not exactly agree about all places, but I'm agree with you about T.rex position.
CompsognathusMember0 XP2013-11-24 19:37:00What would you have changed?
CompsognathusMember2 XP2013-11-26 08:38:00Well, here's my own top 10:
1. Tyrannosaurus (11,4-12,3 m ; 8-9 t)
2. Acrocanthosaurus (11-11,5 m ; 2,4-5 t)
3. Saurophaganax (10-11,5 m ; 3,5-5 t)
4. Siats (Comparable to the two guys above in adulthood)
5. Edmarka (11 m ; 5 t)
6. Allosaurus (10,5-11 m ; 2-4 t)
7. Daspletosaurus (8-9 m ; 2-3 t)
8. Albertosaurus (8-9 m ; 2-2,5 t)
9. Gorgosaurus (Comparable to the guy above)
10. Lythronax (Comparable to the guys above in adulthood)
CompsognathusMember0 XP2013-11-26 14:50:00Edmarka is excluded in my list due to it possibly being a Torvosaurus, so I decided I'd rather be safe than sorry.
CompsognathusMember0 XP2014-01-27 17:19:00i just noticed Rex outweighs all the other Theropods on the list by a good 3-4 tons..crazy stuff
Nature doesn't deceive us; it is we who deceive ourselves.
CompsognathusMember0 XP2014-01-27 17:41:00Using even max estimates, T-rex is twice as heavy as the next biggest, Acrocanthosaurus. A 12 ton T-rex vs a 6 ton Acrocanthosaurus for example.







