Stegosauria
Stegosauria Temporal range: Middle Jurassic – Lower Cretaceous, 169–100 mya
| |
---|---|
Fossil skeleton of a Stegosaurus, National Museum of Natural History | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | |
Class: | |
Superorder: | |
Order: | |
Suborder: | |
Infraorder: | Stegosauria
|
The Stegosaurs were a group of dinosaurs in the suborder Thyreophora. They have small heads, peg-like teeth and vertical bony plates and spines on their back and tail. They flourished from the Upper Jurassic to the Lower Cretaceous.
Classification
[change | change source]The Stegosauria was originally named as an order by O.C. Marsh in 1877.[1] Now it is treated as an infraorder or suborder (or simply a clade) within the armoured dinosaurs, the Thyreophora. The Stegosauria includes the families Huayangosauridae and Stegosauridae.
The Huayangosauridae were an early family of stegosaurs from the Middle Jurassic. They were smaller than later stegosaurs and had shorter and higher skulls. The type genus is Huayangosaurus of China. The poorly-known remains of Regnosaurus from England suggest it also could be a member. Its lower jaw is very similar to that of the former.
The vast majority of stegosaurs being in the Stegosauridae. They lived in the later part of the Jurassic and the early Cretaceous. The group includes the well-known Stegosaurus. The family is widespread, with fossils found in the Northern Hemisphere and Africa. Their decline coincides with that of the Cycadophyta.[2]
Suborder Thyreophora
Infraorder Stegosauria
- Family Huayangosauridae
- Family Stegosauridae
- Adratiklit – (Morocco)
- Chialingosaurus – (Sichuan, China)
- Chungkingosaurus – (Chongqing, China)
- Dacentrurus – (England, France & Spain)
- Hesperosaurus – (Wyoming, USA)
- Miragaia – (Portugal) [3]
- Monkonosaurus – (Tibet, China)
- Paranthodon – (South Africa)
- Wuerhosaurus – (Xinjiang, Western China)
- Kentrosaurus – (Tanzania, Africa)
- Lexovisaurus [4] – (England & France)
- Stegosaurus – (Wyoming, USA)
- Tuojiangosaurus – (Sichuan, China)
- ?Craterosaurus – (Bedfordshire, England)
- Jiangjunosaurus – (Xinjiang, Western China)
- Uncertain placement (incertae sedis)
- Gigantspinosaurus – (Sichuan, China)
References
[change | change source]- ↑ Marsh O.C. 1877. New order of extinct Reptilia (Stegosauria) from the Jurassic of the Rocky Mountains. American Journal of Science, 14(ser.3):513-514.
- ↑ Butler, R.J; Barrett P.M; Kenrick P. and Penn M.G. 2009. Diversity patterns amongst herbivorous dinosaurs and plants during the Cretaceous: implications for hypotheses of dinosaur/angiosperm co-evolution. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 22: 446–459.
- ↑ Mateus, Octávio; Maidment, Susannah C.R.; Christiansen, Nicolai A. (2009). "A new long-necked 'sauropod-mimic' stegosaur and the evolution of the plated dinosaurs" (pdf). Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 276 (1663): 1815–21. doi:10.1098/rspb.2008.1909. PMC 2674496. PMID 19324778.
- ↑ Maidment, Susannah C. R.; Norman, David B.; Barrett, Paul M.; Upchurch, Paul (2008). "Systematics and phylogeny of Stegosauria (Dinosauria: Ornithischia)". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 6 (4): 367–407. doi:10.1017/S1477201908002459. S2CID 85673680.