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Could Jurassic Park ever really happen? How much of what you saw in Jurassic Park can be considered real? Discuss all of that and more here...
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Post by allosaurus »

next Question what is the largest carnivor found
roar!!!!!!!!!!!! ,
what was that
,its a trex
no! it sounds bigger

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Giga.
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Post by allosaurus »

incorectt heres a clue they only found the arms of this creture.
roar!!!!!!!!!!!! ,
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,its a trex
no! it sounds bigger

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Post by Deepu_ravi »

Deinochirus.
[The lawyer seeks shelter from the T.Rex in a bathroom]
Dr. Alan Grant: Well where does he think he's going?
Dr. Ian Malcolm: When you gotta go, you gotta go

- Jurassic Park
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Post by Mallon »

How can you possibly know what the biggest dinosaur was based solely on arms?
The biggest dinosaur we know of from relatively complete remains is Giganotosaurus.
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Post by allosaurus »

deinocheirus is corectt and also mallon the didnt only find arms they found some vertabrets which gave a big hint to what size it was.
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Post by Mallon »

Problem is, the vertebrae that were associated with the skeleton have yet to be described, so they aren't much use in determining the size of the animal if no one's seen them.
Consider also the fact that if Deinocheirus really was an ornithomimid, it would have been an overgrown one at that, and likely underwent some pretty serious allometric changes as it grew, resulting in a more robust, stumpy animal (like comparing T. rex to Albertosaurus). More than likely, Deinocheirus wasn't the largest of the theropods. (See here: http://dml.cmnh.org/2003Jul/msg00355.html)
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Post by allosaurus »

actualy> > Accordingly, phylogenetic bracketing woud require that _Deinocheirus_
had an
> > arctometatarsalian pes, or secondarily lost it. Interestingly, under
this
> > phylogeny both _Deinocheirus_ and alvarezsaurids belong to an expanded
> > Bullatosauria.
>
> Since _Deinocheirus_ has long been thought to be an ornithomimosaur, it
was
> supposed to have an arctometatarsalian pes (or reversal from that state,
as you
> say) anyway, and would also have been included under _Bullatosauria_ in
> phylogenies where the clade was not equivalent to _Maniraptoriformes_.

Indeed.


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Post by allosaurus »

hers some big info on dinos During the Late Cretaceous the final break up of Pangea continued with the rifting of Eurasia from North America and Greenland, and India, Australia, and Antarctica from Africa. The high rates of formation of new oceanic crust resulted in significant belt of relatively warm (and hence unusually low density) oceanic crust around the spreading ridges. These low density bands of lithosphere floated higher on the asthernosphere than cooler crust and thus displaced ocean waters onto low-lying parts of the continents. The Late Cretaceous is thus a time of very high sea level and vast excursions of marine waters into the continents creating vast epicontinental seas. These fragmented the areas above water into relatively small island continents.



1, Mongolia; 2, Argentina; 3, Western North America, 4; New Jersey.

The rapid rates of oceanic crust formation also undoubtedly pumped unusually large amounts of CO2 into the atmosphere. Perhaps as a consequence, this CO2 ended up being removed from the atmosphere as CaCO3 (Calcium Carbonate) much of which consisted of chalk (see Lecture 18).

Based on recent work, CO2 seems to have been declining during the Late Cretaceous, as may have global average temperatures - although there is little evidence of significant polar ice. The reason for the CO2 decline is controversial, but may be related to the continued evolutionary and ecological radiation of the flowering plants, with concomitant increased continental weathering rates.

Mongolia
In 1908 Henry Fairfield Osborn, a famous mammalian vertebrate paleontologist became president of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City. He believed he that origin of both humans and dinosaurs lie in Central Asia, largely because he thought that region lay in the center of dispersal of seemingly similar types of humans and dinosaurs. But during the turn of the century most of Asia, especially central Asia, was very poorly known to Western Science, especially paleontology, so Osborn was free to speculate at will. It was known, however, that Mongolia (alternately controlled by Russia and China) has vast expanses of desert, specifically the Gobi desert, a vast region with badlands with excellent rock outcrops that would be the area to look for "missing links", were they to be found in Asia at all.

Roy Chapman Andrews was an ambitious researcher who had worked his way up at the American Museum from floor washer to professional mammalogist. In 1920 he proposed to Osborn that he lead a massive expedition to Outer Mongolia, not only to search for the "missing link" between humans and apes but also to conduct a general scientific study of the region, which was indeed very poorly known.

Although it was potentially very risky, Osborn enthusiastically agreed, and private funds were raised for what became known as the Central Asiatic Expedition, which departed for Beijing in 1922.

According to Preston (1986), Roy Chapman Andrews was the real basis for the fictitious Indian Jones character of "Raiders of the Lost Ark", played by Harrison Ford. The picture on the left from the frontispiece of Andrews' autobiography, is described by Preston (p. 120-121) as follows.

"[The picture] shows [Andrews] sitting on a dessert hillock. He holds a 6.5 mm Mannlicher rifle in his right hand, and wears a cartridge belt loaded with bullets around his waist. On his feet are dusty leather jackboots . His rumpled wool shirt is rolled up at the sleeves. A worn ranger hat , sporting a pheasant feather, is perched on his head, cocked at an angle. The man is pictured in profile, his hard, clean jaw slightly elevated , his pale eyes gazing off into the distance. Behind him rise the Flaming Cliffs of Shabarakh Usu [Bayn Dzak], in the heart of the Gobi Desert."

Andrews expedition was the first to operate with automobiles which could much more effectively carry heavy fossils and gear, but they had to be supplied in advance, and periodically by a huge camel caravans bringing fuel and supplies.
Discovery of Dinosaurs at the Flaming Cliffs
The Central Asiatic Expedition never did find the anthropoid "missing link", by during the second field season (1923) George Olson of the expedition (no relation) found what were quickly recognized to be dinosaur eggs at Flaming Cliffs of Bayn Dzak. On op of one nest was the skeleton of a small toothless dinosaur (know known as Oviraptor) that was erroneously assumed until the 1990's to have died while eating the eggs (see below). This discovery more than any other established the great success of the expedition.
The Central Asiatic Expedition of (1921-1930) and following research projects, notably the Polish Mongolian Expedition (xxxx-xxxx), the Canadian-Chinese Dinosaur Project (xxxx), and the recent American-Mongolian expeditions (199x-present) produced one of the greatest assemblages of the dinosaurs from the world.

The most famous Late Cretaceous dinosaur-bearing formations are the Djadochta and Nemegt, both containing abundant eolian (wind) and water-laid deposits. Below the best known of the dinosaurs from these two formations are briefly described along with their phylogenetic relationships.

Ornithischian Dinosaurs from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia
Classification of Mongolian Ornithischians
There is a great diversity of ornithischian dinosaurs from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia. Critical ones, filling out our cladistic analysis of the ornithischians, are classified below, and then described below that.
Ornithischia
Genasauria
Thyreophora
Ankylosauria
Ankylosauridae
Pinacosaurus grangeri
Cerapoda
Ornithopoda
Hadrosauria
Saurolophus angustirostis
Marginocephalia
Pachycephalosauria
Homalocephale calathoceros
Prenocephale prenes
Ceratopsia
Neoceratopsia
Protoceratops andrewsii
Pinacosaurus grangeri

Based on Carpenter (1997).
Pinacosaurus is a common dinosaur in the Mongolian deposits. It is an ankylosaurid (member of the Family Ankylosauridae) as opposed to a nodosaurian as we saw in Sauropelta from the Cloverly in the previous lecture.
Ankylosaurids differ from nodosaurians in retention of a primitive configuration of the skull roof (e. g. there are still paired plates). However, ankylosaurids also have the novel shared derived character of having a bony club at the end of the tail (above). Ankylosaurids, such as Pinacosaurus also tend to have broader skulls than nodosaurids and tend to have spikes on the rear covered of their box-like skulls.

Saurolophus angustirostis







Postcrania based loosely on Parasaurolophus from Brett-Surman (1997) and skull after Norman and Weishample (1990).

Saurolophus is a medium-sized hadrosaurian (member of the Hadrosauria) ornithopod from Mongolia. It is also a crested hadrosaur, which means that it has a crest composed largely of the nasal bones, a condition that seems to have evolved independently among different hadrosaur groups (hence having a crest has little phylogenetic significance.

Hadrosaurian ornithopods are among the most common of all dinosaurs in the Late Cretaceous, in general, although not especially so in Mongolia. In many ways they are similar to iguanodontids, except they tend to have a more superficially duck-like snout - thus the common name "duck-billed" dinosaurs

The duck-like snout of Saurolophus can clearly be seen in the skull on the right. The portion of the snout lacking teeth was covered by a keratinous beak (as in birds or turtles).
In this case the crest is small, especially compared with other crested hadrosaurs.

Species of Saurolophus are know from Western North America, as well as Central Asia.



Skull of Saurolophus, after Weishample and Horner (1990)

The shared derived character for the Hadrosauria is the loss of digit I of the manus. This completes a trend seen in the ornithopod of the reduction of digit I starting with the complete digit in hypsilophodontids and Heterodontosaurus, with reduction in Camptosaurus and other iguanontids, culminating in the hadrosaurians.

On the left are the manus and pes of a hadrosaur (Lambeosaurus in the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Alberta Canada showing the loss of digit I of the manus.


Prenocephale prenes







Prenocephale: postcrania based loosely on Stegoceras from Forester and Sereno (1997) with skull of Prenocephale from the same source.

Prenocephale, is a member of the Pachycephalosauria, the shared derived character for which is the thickened skull roof, which in this case makes a massive dome. The Pachycephalosauria, or dome heads, are the sister group to the Ceratopsia within the Marginocephalia.
In general, pachycephalosaurs tend to be small lightly-built dinosaurs, comparable in size to sheep or antelope (although there are exceptions). Like sheep, it is thought that pachycephalosaurs butted heads during dominance rituals, and the massively thickened skull protected their small brains.

The skull (right) of Prenocephale shows the spectacular domed skull roof. Despite its cerebral appearance, the high forehead is all bone.


Homalocephale calathoceros

Another pachycephalosaur from Mongolia is Homalocephale. It is not known from nearly as abundant material as Prenocephale and it is considerably more primitive.
Unlike Prenocephale, Homalocephale does not have a dome at all. Instead the skull roof is flat and thickened.


Protoceratops andrewsii


Protoceratops redrawn from Paul (in Dodson, 1997).


Skull of Protoceratops andrewsii. Based on Paul (in Dodson, 1997)
Protoceratops is the most common dinosaur in the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia, being represented by hundreds of individuals. Skeletons of this dinosaur found at Bayn Dzak (the Flaming Cliffs; Djadochta Formation) contributed greatly to the most spectacular results of the Andrews expeditions. It was discovered on the first expedition, and on the second expedition Andrews numerous skulls and skeletons. Enough skeletons were found that it was possible to look at the growth sequence of embryos to adults and make a strong case for sexual dimorphism (Dodson, 1976; Dong and Currie, 1993).
Protoceratops is a small neoceratopsian that lacks well developed horns. Its crest is well-developed, but not massive.


Cladogram of the Genasauria
We are now in a position to complete our cladogram of the Genasauria as follows.
(You can also go to the summary cladograms via this link: http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/edu/dees/cour...asterclads.html

1. cheeks
2. armor
3. armor as plates covering back
4. armor as spikes or plates
5. uneven enamel
6. back part of skull makes shelf
7. rostral bone
8. frill
9. reduced hands
10. domed head
11. jaw joint below tooth row
12. elongate hands
13. prepubic process well developed
14. ridge on teeth
15. reduction in manus digits I and V (and large nares)
16. manus digit 1 spike-like

Saurischian Dinosaurs from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia
While the ornithischian dinosaurs of Mongolia certainly are spectacular, the saurischians are what add dramatically to knowledge of what dinosaurs actually are - especially in relation to birds. Not only is their preservation often spectacular, augmented with the new Liaoning Early Cretaceous finds (see lecture 18), they show us the seemingly seamless gradation between "dinosaurness" and "birdness".
Classification of Mongolian Saurischians
The critical saurischian dinosaurs we will look at here finalize our cladogram of the Saurischia. The classification is given below, and as in the ornithischians above, the taxa are described individually below the classification.
Saurischia
Sauropodomorpha
Diplodocidae
Nemgtosaurus mongoliensis
Theropoda
Coelurosauria
Arctometatarsalia
Bullatosauria
Troodontia
Sauroidithoides junior
Ornithomimia
Gallimimus bullatus
?Deinocheirus mirificus
Tyrannosauridae
Tarbosaurus bataar
Maniraptora
Deinonychosauria
Velociraptor mongoliensis
Avialia
Mononychus olecranus
Oviraptoria
Oviraptor mongoliensis
Segnosauria
Therizinosaurus cheloniformes
Segnosaurus galbinensis
Erlikosaurus andrewsii
Nemgtosaurus mongoliensis
While sauropod dinosaurs had certainly declined in prominence since the Late Jurassic, they still were a significant part of the dinosaurian communities in the Late Cretaceous, probably right up to its abrupt end. Nemgtosaurus mongoliensis is a medium sized sauropod from Mongolia, recognizable as a diplodocid by the restriction of teeth to the front of the mouth.

Other than the somewhat jutting mandible in Nemgtosaurus mongoliensis the skeleton appears to be of normal diplodocid proportions.

Saurornithoides junior

The little Saurornithoides junior is recognizable as a theropod by its three-toed pes, and as a member of the Coelurosauria by its long arms. Sauroidithoides has rather small but numerous teeth, and these teeth sport disproportionally large tubercles along their edges. The orbits are very large and the brain cavity is huge (for a non-bird dinosaur).




Saurornithoides junior (Redrawn from Paul (1988) from his Troodon mongoliensis based on AMNH 6516).


Teeth of Troodon compared with those of Saurornithoides.
The distinctive teeth of Saurornithoides are similar to those of Troodon from western North America. This kind of tooth structure is nearly unique among the Dinosauria and is the shared derived character for the Troodontia. These kind of teeth probably served for gripping small prey, such as small lizards, mammals, and insects, rather than for cutting flesh like more typical, and proportionally larger, theropod teeth.

The reduction in tooth size and well as the proportionally very large brain is also seen in the ostrich mimic dinosaurs, the Ornithomimia (see below). These characters along with others allow the recognition of the group Bullatosauria, consisting of the Troodontia and the Ornithomimia.


Saurornithoides also has a distinctive development in the pes also seen in a surprising array of Cretaceous theropods. Specifically, metatarsal III of the pes narrows proximally between metatarsal II and IV to a thin splint. Holtz (xxxx) argues that this feature is a shared derived character uniting the Troodontia with the Ornithomimia and most surprisingly with the Tyrannosauria. This group has been named the Arctometatarsalia, and although we will recognize this group here, it is far from non-controversial. A plausible hypothesis is that this configuration is an adaptation for reducing compressive stresses along the axis of the foot while running.

Gallimimus bullatus


Gallimimus bullatus, redrawn from Paul (1988).
Gallimimus bullatus is an extremely graceful dinosaur that is characterized by having virtually no teeth (edentulous, see left) and by having very long arms in which the manus has three metacarpals of nearly equal length. The latter character is a shared derived character for the Ornithomimia, or "ostrich mimic" dinosaurs, so called because of their rather ostrich-like proportions and skull that must have supported an ostrich-like beak. Note especially the very long tibia and metatarsals relative to the femur, contributing much to its bird-like appearance.

Gallimimus skull. Based on Paul (1988).

The Gallimimus pes (far right) shows a rather extreme version of the arctometatarsalian condition with metatarsal III not even making it the full length of the metatarsus.
Gallimimus left manus

Gallimimus
right pes
A small comb-like array of tiny teeth has been recently discovered on the premaxilla of Gallimimus (arrow, above). This structure may have been used in straining larger plankton from shallow lakes.


Recently an ornithomimid with teeth has been discovered in Spain. Pelicominimus is a seemingly normal ornithomimid except that it has very numerous, very small teeth in both jaws. The condition is reminiscent of the Troodontia and it possible that the latter, if defined only on the basis of its teeth, could be a paraphyletic group. In any case, Pelicominimus shows that the character transformation of the teeth to the edentulous condition seen in most ornithomimids occurred by reduction in size, first, not in number.



Deinocheirus mirificus


The shared derived feature of the Ornithomimia, the three sub-equal metacarpals is seen in a shockingly large, but sadly very incomplete, dinosaur, Deinocheirus mirificus, known only from its arms and shoulder girdle (left). What the rest of this dinosaur looked like is a mystery, but it seems rather convincingly a member of the Ornithomimia. If it were proportionally scaled to Gallimimus, it would be gigantic, larger than Tyrannosaurus rex!

Here in anterior view in outline can clearly be seen the three subequal metacarples of Deinocheirus (on right). I have paired them here with an outline drawing of an ornithomimiid.






Tarbosaurus bataar

By far the top carnivore in the Mongolian assemblages was the theropod Tarbosaurus bataar. Tarbosaurus is massively built, with a very large skull on a relatively short neck. It is quite likely that Tarbosaurus is actually a member of the genus Tyrannosaurus as suggested by Paul (1988) and Carr (1999) with the differences being attributible to either individual variation, differences at the speices level, or changes during growth.



Tarbosaurus bataar, based on Paul (1988).
The arms, however, are diminutive, with only two functional fingers (on left, showing a left arm). This character is shared with, among others, the famous Tyrannosaurus rex itself, and is the shared derived character for the Tyrannosauria. We will delay the discussion of details of tyrannosaurs until the next lecture (Lecture 20). However, it is important to note that Tarbosaurus does have a typical arctometatarsalian metatarsus (as do all tyrannosaurs) which is one reason they are now considered coelurosaurs (on right, showing a left pes). Tyrannosaurs traditionally were classified as carnosaurs, a practice that was based on shared similarities that are probably adaptations to a large size (i.e. analogous, not homologous features), although many, if not most workers would now say that the arctometatarsalian condition itself was evolved multiple times and therefore itself constitute an analogous character.
While the skeletons of Tarbosaurus and Tyrannosaurus are very similar, there are some important proportional differences. For example, the humorous (h) and especially the radius ® and ulna (u) are much longer relative to the phalanges in Tarbosaurus than in Tyrannosaurus.

In addition, the pes (right) of Tarbosaurus is more narrow than in Tyrannosaurus, although, that could be due to growth and size related phenomena.


Velociraptor mongoliensis

The Maniraptora are very well represented in the Mongolian Late Cretaceous, both members of the Deinonychosauria and Avialia.


Velociraptor mongoliensis, redrawn from Paul (1988).

Velociraptor mongoliensis is one of the best known of all of the Mongolian saurischians, and it is famous as well, having starred in both "Jurassic Park" movies. In most ways Velociraptor resembles a more slender Deinonychus and possess, like the latter a well-developed tearing claw on digit II of the pes. The two genera are so similar that Paul (xxxx) attempted to synonomize Deinonychus and Velociraptor, retaining the latter genus name for both forms. This has not been widely followed, however.


The skull is definitely more shallow in Velociraptor than Deinonychus, with a distinctly much more concave dorsal edge seen in all specimens (see left). (Based on Paul, 1988)
The manus is very similar to that of Deinonychus and of course Archaeopteryx, but less robust than the former and more robust than the latter.

Velociraptor and the Origin of the Avian Flight Stroke
One of the most interesting of avian features is the highly stereotyped flight stroke. The motion of the flight stroke is largely controlled by the configuration of the wrist bones, especially the semilunate carpal. Because this feature is obviously present in the non-bird maniraptorans, it has been hypothesized that much typical motion of the flight stroke actually evolved for predation and was only later cooped for flight.
Predation in Velociraptor and deinonychosaurs in general, has been reconstructed as a lunge and with the arms (the rocking motion of the semilunate carpal playing critical role) followed by a push and tear with the hind limbs and the specialized trenchant claw on digit II.

Amazingly, this hypothesis has been very strongly corroborated by the discovery of a Velociraptor preserved in the act of killing a Protoceratops. This specimen (right), discovered by the Polish-Mongolian expeditions shows a Velociraptor with its hands wrapped onto the head of a Protoceratops while the hind feet of the carnivore are against its belly of the herbivore. Evidently, both were entombed by the collapse of a sand dune. The Velociraptor seemingly could not get away because the Protoceratops had closed its jaws on one of the former's arms.

A critical argument long used against the dinosaurian origin of birds has been the supposed lack of clavicles in dinosaurs. As we have seen this is actually not the case. A recently described very nice example of dinosaurian clavicles is afforded by a specimen described by Norell et al. (1997). Not only are clavicles present, but they are fused into a very bird-like furcula (left).
Together with the well-developed sternum seen in Velociraptor, the entire shoulder girdle is very similar to that seen in primitive birds.



Mononychus olecranus

The Avialia are represented by several forms in the Mongolian deposits, but perhaps the most remarkable is Mononychus olecranus, known from relatively complete remains.


According to Norell et al. (199x), who originally described it, Mononychus olecranus is a bird (avialian) because it has a manus that show a fusion of bones seen in birds considerably more advanced than Archaeopteryx. However, the arms of Mononychus are very short and stoutly constructed (below), with only one large pointy digit. Norell et al. (199x) argue that Mononychus was secondarily flightless. That is, it was descended from an ancestor with fully developed flight. The long tail, and structure of the pelvis, suggest that if this hypothesis is true, the bird from which Mononychus was descended was not very advanced.


The adaptation for flightlessness and predation seen in Mononychus is very reminiscent of some American Plio-Pleistocene (about 4-2 million years ago) birds such as Titanornis that also have a large claw on the manus. As we have seen the capacity to re-evolve claws on the hands of birds is no that rare (e.g., hoatzin and ostrich).
Oviraptor mongoliensis

Two coelurosaurian groups, the Oviraptoria and the Segnosauria, vie for the most bizarre of Mongolian dinosaur groups. We will consider the Oviraptoria first as represented by its best known representative the eponymous Oviraptor mongoliensis.


Oviraptor mongoliensis is a fairly common Mongolian dinosaur. It is named after its supposed habit of stealing eggs of other dinosaur (ova- raptor = egg stealer), an example of which was the little skeleton found on top the eggs by Roy Chapman Andrews and his expedition.


The type of eggs in the nest ar typical of those that usually have been associated with Protoceratops. However, Norell et al. (1997) have shown that eggs of that form (from a different nest) actually contain the embryos of Oviraptor, not Protoceratops. This allows the conclusion the Oviraptor was actually nesting these eggs, not stealing them!


The skull of Oviraptor is truly weird. It is edentulous, and the skull roof is inflated into a large crest full of fenestrae. The palate curves downward, rather than upward as is usual, and in the middle is a pointed tooth-like structure (left). What exactly the peculiar structures on the skull of Oviraptor were for is unknown. Anterior is to left.
The skeleton of Oviraptor is generally maniraptoran-like, although it lacks the typical maniraptoran-type of semilunate carpal and the pubis points forward unlike other bone fide members of the Maniraptora. The tail is incompletely known but seems rather slender. The shoulder girdle has a very well developed furcula and sternum (right). It has long arms and is clearly a coelurosaur.
Norell et al. (1994) described an additional specimen of Oviraptor found on top of eggs. While the skeleton is fragmentary, the arms and legs are draped around the eggs in exactly the position seen in birds that nest on the ground (right).

In the nest in which the embryo-bearing Oviraptor eggs were found, Norell et al. (1994) also found a partial skull of a baby Velociraptor. Two hypotheses come to mind to explain this association:

1. The skull belongs to a Velociraptor baby that got into the Oviraptor nest to eat eggs and babies, was discovered and dismembered.
2. The skull belongs to a Velociraptor baby that was brought to the nest by an adult in care of the nest as food, and the head was left over as scrap.
The first is more "romantic", adding to the nasty reputation of Velociraptor (even as a baby ...). The second seems more likely.
In any case, the new discoveries show Oviraptor to have exhibited very bird-like nesting behavior. Norell et al. (1995) have reconstructed the position of the nesting Oviraptor just prior to its death as shown below.


Oviraptor nesting, based on Norell et al. (1995).
The Early Cretaceous Liaoning deposits of China have produced an ovaraptorid, Caudipteryx. It has a fan of feathers on its tail and symmetrical feathers on its arms.


Reconstruction of Caudipteryx.
Another ovaraptorid had a shortened tail with distal vertebrae fused into a so-called pygostyle, otherwise seen in advanced birds. Presumably this represents a convergent evolutionary adaptation, because the rest of the skeleton is more primitive than maniraptorans..

It seems fairly obvious, however, that the Oviraptoria represent an aberrant branch of the Coelurosauria with many very bird-like features, both anatomically and behaviorally. How exactly the ovaraptorans fit within the Coelurosauria is not obvious and I place them within an unresolved polytomy with the other groups of coelurosaurs plus Compsognathus (see below).


The Therizinosauria

Segnosaurus galbinensis, Erlikosaurus andrewsii, and Therizinosaurus cheloniformes relatively newly discoverd Beipiaosaurus inexpectus (Early Cretaceous, China) are bizarre saurischians know from fairly incomplete remains (in the case of Therizinosaurus,VERY incomplete), but enough is known to get a good idea of their general structure. They all share unusually large and elongate unguals (terminal phalanges) on the manus.
Segnosaurus and Erlikosaurus, at least, have a backwardly projecting pubis suggestive of the Maniraptora, but the neck is long, but massive. The skull has an edentulous, ornithischian-like beak anteriorly, and posteriorly the dentition looks prosauropod like!
Reconstruction of Segnosaurus (based on [url=http://the_dinosauria.tripod.com/therizinosaurs.html)]http://the_dinosauria.tripod.com/therizinosaurs.html)[/url].
Therizinosaurus cheloniformes
(right manus)



Therizinosaurus cheloniformes was originally based on a single huge claw. Its shape is very similar to the hand claws of Segnosaurus. A reconstruted complete hand is shown above, right. Even if this hand and isolated claw does belong to a member of the Therizinosauria, which have disproportionally large claws, it would still represent a gigantic dinosaur.

For a time it seemed that the Therizinosauria might be descendants of the Prosauropoda, but it seems now that they actually have a fairly extensive suite of coelurosaurian characters. Presently, they appear to be coelurosaurs that have convergently evolved a prosauropod-like habitus. They also appear to have a superficial resemblance in form to a group of ungulate mammals known as the calicotheres, which lived during the Miocene. The structural adaptations seen in the segnosaurs suggests herbivory on trees, although, some have suggested a termite-eating life style, with the huge claws being used anteater-like to rip open their mounds. Like the Ovaraptoria, its relations within the Coelurosauria are uncertain.

Like so many members of the Coelurosauria, we now know that the therizinosaurs were covered in feather-like structures thanks to the discovery of Beipiaosaurus inexpectus from China, which is clearly a therizinosaur.


Cladogram of the Theropoda
We can also now complete our cladogram of the Theropoda, below.
(You can also go to the summary cladograms via this link: http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/edu/dees/cour...asterclads.html

1. three-toed foot
2. digits IV and V lost on hand
3. long arms
4. semilunate carpal
5. fused pelvis
6. large hole in lachrymal bone in skull
7. ?no unique derived characters?
8. giant, hook-like claw on digit II of pes
9. flight feathers
10. ?no unique derived characters?
11. proximal half of metatarsal of digit III pinched
12. teeth lost in front of mouth and very large claws on manus

Comprehensive Cladograms
All of the major groups of dinosaurs have now been covered. Here are two summary cladograms that cover all of the groups in this course.: http://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/edu/dees/cour...asterclads.html
References
Brett-Surman, M. K., 1997, Ornithopods. In Farlow, J. O. and Brett-Surman, M. K. (eds.) The Complete Dinosaur, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, p. 330-346.
Carpenter, K., 1997, Ankylosaurs. In Farlow, J. O. and Brett-Surman, M. K. (eds.) The Complete Dinosaur, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, p. 307-316.


Carr, T. D., Craniofacial ontogeny in Tyrannosauridae (Dinosauria, Coelurosauria). Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, v. 19(3), p. 497-520.


Dodson, P., 1976, Quantitative aspects of relative growth and sexual dimorphism in Protoceratops. Journal of Paleontology v. 50, p. 929-940.

Dodson, P., 1996, The Horned Dinosaurs. Princeton University Press, Princeton, 346 p.

Dong, Z. M. and Currie, P. J., 1993, Protoceratopsian embryos from Inner Mongolia, Peoples Republic of China. Canadian Journal of Earth Science v. 30, 2248-2254.

Forster, C. A. and Sereno, P. C., 1997, Marginocephalians. In Farlow, J. O. and Brett-Surman, M. K. (eds.) The Complete Dinosaur, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, p. 317-329.Norell et al. (199x)

Norell, M. A. Clark, J. M., Chiappe, L. M., Dashzeveg, D., 1995, A nesting dinosaur. Nature, v. 378, 774-776.

Norell, M. A., Makovicky, P., Clark, J. M., 1997, A Velociraptor wishbone. Nature 389, p. 447.


Norell, M. A., Clark, J. M., Dashzeveg, D., Barsbold, R., Chiappe, L. M., Davidson, A. R., McKenna, M. C., Perle, A., and Novacek, M. J., 1994, A theropod dinosaur embryo and the affinities of the Flaming Cliffs dinosaur eggs. Science, 256, p. 779-782.

Paul, G. S., 1988, Predatory Dinosaurs. New York, New York Academy of Sciences, 464 p.


Preston, D. J., 1986, Dinosaurs in the Attic. Ballantine Books, New York, 308 p.

Russell (xxxx)

Weishample, D. B. and Horner, J. R., 1990, Hadrosauridae. In Weishample. D. B., Dodson, P., and Osmolska, H. (eds.) The Dinosauria. University of California Press, Berkeley, p. 534-561.
roar!!!!!!!!!!!! ,
what was that
,its a trex
no! it sounds bigger

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Mallon
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What am I supposed to get out of any of that???
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