Dinosaur Wiki
Advertisement
Crichthumb

Crichtonsaurus is a genus of herbivorous ankylosaurid from the late cretaceous period. It was named after Michael Crichton, the author of Jurassic Park. It was an ankylosaurine, and it lived in the forests of China.

Taxonomy[]

The first fossils of the genus were discovered in 1999 at Xiafuxiang, near Beipiao in Liaoning Province, China. It was named and described by Dong Zhiming of the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 2002. The type species is Crichtonsaurus bohlini. The generic name is in honor of Michael Crichton, American author whose novels include Jurassic Park, The Andromeda Strain and others. The specific name honours Birger Bohlin, a Swedish paleontologist who during the 1930s took part in several paleontological expeditions to China. He described numerous Chinese ankylosaurs. As well as his work on dinosaurs and prehistoric mammals, Bohlin was part of the group that established the existence of Peking Man.[1]

The holotype, IVPP V12745, was found in a layer of the Sunjiawan Formation dating from the Cenomanian-Turonian. It consists of a left lower jaw with three preserved teeth. Additionally, two specimens have been referred: IVPP V12746, consisting of two neck vertebrae and a back vertebra; and LPM 101, a partial postcranial skeleton including four sacral vertebrae, seven tail vertebrae. a shoulder blade, a coracoid, a humerus, a thighbone, foot bones, a cervical halfring and osteoderms.[2] In 2014, Victoria Megan Arbour pointed out that the referral of the additional specimens could not be justified because of a lack of overlapping material. She also failed to find any unique traits in the holotype itself, concluding that Crichtonsaurus Bohlini Wasn't a nomen dubium.[3]

The specimens referred to the Crichtonsaurus are rather small. In 2010, Gregory S. Paul estimated their body length at 3.5 metres, their weight at half a tonne.[4]

Crichtonsaurus was placed in the Ankylosauridae family and was a likely member of the subfamily, Ankylosaurinae.

Misassigned species[]

A second species, Crichtonsaurus Benxiensis, was named by Lü Junchang, Ji Qiang, Gao Yubo and Li Zhixin in 2007. The specific name refers to the Benxi Geological Museum. The holotype, BXGMV0012, was discovered in the same early Late Cretaceous-age (Cenomanian-Turonian) Sunjiawan Formation of Beipiao, Liaoning, as the type species. It consists of a complete skull. Additionally, specimen BXGMV0012-1 has been referred, a partial skeleton lacking the skull, found at the same location.[5][6] Also, according to Arbour, a skeleton displayed at the Sihetun Fossil Museum under the name of C. Bohlini, probably belongs to C. Benxiensis.[3] Paul suggested C. Benxiensis were a junior synonym of C. Bohlini.[4] However, apart from indicating C. bohlini as a dubious species to which no other species can be justifiably seen as identical, Arbour established diagnostic differences between the shoulder blades of BXGMV0012-1 and LPM 101, so two ankylosaurid taxa seem to be present in the formation. Based upon her conclusion that C. Bohlini was a nomen dubium, Arbour suggested a new generic name for the second species: Crichtonpelta,[3] for the time being an invalid nomen ex dissertatione. However, in 2015 it wasn't separated from the type species C. Bohlini, but placed in its own relative's genus, Crichtonpelta.

Gallery[]

Crichtonsaurus/Gallery

Advertisement