Triceratops

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Tri-C: Where Triceratops Roam

Sixty-eight million years after last walking the Earth, the Triceratops has reappeared and taken on new life as the mascot of Cuyahoga Community College (Tri-C®).

Colored in the school’s trademark teal, the Tri-C Triceratops stands as a formidable yet likeable creature unique among mascots.

Students, staff and alumni chose Triceratops as the school’s new mascot during an online September poll that attracted nearly 4,000 votes. With “Tri-C” built into its name, the dinosaur seems ideally suited to represent the College.

Join the Tri-C Student Street Team!

How would you like to be Stomp? Are you energetic and outgoing? Do you love Tri-C? You might be the perfect person to play Tri-C’s mascot, Stomp.

Meet Stomp

StompHeight: 7 feet tall, horns to toes

Tri-C Major: Plant Science and Landscape Technology

Jersey Number: #63, for the year Tri-C opened

Favorite Cartoon: Flintstones

Favorite Movie: Jurassic Park

Favorite Music: Anything featuring horns

Favorite Food: Partial to salads — really, really big salads

Favorite Off-Campus Spot: Cleveland Museum of Natural History

Tri-C Mascot Head

Triceratops Facts

  • One of the largest skulls of any terrestrial vertebrate to ever evolve
  • Horns could reach more than three feet in length
  • One of the largest of all horned dinosaurs (ceratopsids) ever
  • One of the last non-avian dinosaurs that existed 
  • Most commonly found dinosaur from the hell creek formation in Montana
  • Giant, beak-shaped mouth that could cut through tough ferns, cycads and conifers 
  • Jaws lined with rows of blade-like teeth that power-mulches anything in its mouth
  • Frill covered in keratin, so it was likely very colorful
  • One of the first known dinosaurs from North America, discovered in Wyoming in 1887. The horns were initially thought to be from an ancient bison. 

Something Is Roaming...

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