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Dinosaur Scale Comparison Presentation Template - with Morph Transition

N0100026

  • Last Update 11/19/2025
  • File Size 46.4MB
  • # of Slides 9
  • File Format PPTX
  • Slide Ratio 16:9
  • Color

About the Product

This moving PowerPoint template combines photorealistic 3D dinosaur renders with a precision scale graph on a dark navy background, delivering a museum-quality visual experience in your presentation. Featuring 8 dinosaur species from Compsognathus (1m) to Argentinosaurus (35m), each compared against a 1.7m human silhouette, the deck uses PowerPoint's Morph transition to seamlessly zoom from the full comparison slide into individual dinosaur slides. Bold green title typography and orange-red accent badges create striking contrast against the dark backdrop, giving your slides an immersive, cinematic feel. The PPTX file includes all Morph transition effects ready to use, with fully editable text, images, and colors. Ideal for science education, natural history exhibitions, and STEM presentations.

Usage Points

  • Main Usage

    Designed to visually compare the actual sizes of 8 dinosaur species — from Compsognathus (1m) to Argentinosaurus (35m) — against a human reference, using a precision scale graph and Morph transition storytelling for education and exhibition presentations.

  • How to Use

    Start with the full comparison slide showing all 8 species, then use Morph transitions to drill into each individual dinosaur slide for detailed size and feature explanations. Replace dinosaur images and text to adapt the template for other animal or object size comparisons.

  • Recommended For

    Science and natural history teachers, STEM content creators, natural history museum exhibit planners, and educators preparing engaging visual presentations for children and young audiences.

  • Slide Structure

    9 slides total: 1 master comparison slide displaying all 8 species on a 0–35m scale grid, followed by 8 individual slides for Compsognathus, Velociraptor, Pachycephalosaurus, Ankylosaurus, Stegosaurus, Triceratops, Parasaurolophus, and Argentinosaurus, each with a human silhouette for scale reference.

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