Abrictosaurus

Abrictosaurus was a heterodontosaurid dinosaur from the Lower Jurassic of what is now southern Africa. It was a small bipedal herbivore or omnivore, about 1.2 meters (4 feet) long, and weighing less than 45 kilograms (100 pounds).

Abrictosaurus
Temporal range: Early Jurassic,
Abrictosaurus.jpg
Specimen NHMUK RU B54
Scientific classification e
Unrecognized taxon (fix): Abrictosaurus
Species

Abrictosaurus is usually thought to be the most basal member of the family Heterodontosauridae.[1][2] Lycorhinus and Heterodontosaurus both had high-crowned cheek teeth, which went over each other in the jaw, making a continuous chewing surface analogous to those of Cretaceous hadrosaurids. Abrictosaurus had more widely-split cheek teeth, with lower crowns, more similar to other early ornithischians.

The family as a whole has canine-like tusks.[3] Tusks were clearly present on one of the two specimens of Abrictosaurus. The upper caniniform measured 10.5 millimeters (0.4 inches) high, while the lower reached 17 mm (0.67 in).[4][5]

Abrictosaurus had smaller, less powerful forelimbs than Heterodontosaurus and one fewer phalanx bone (finger joint) in both the fourth and fifth digits of the forelimb.[6]

Abrictosaurus Media

References

  1. Norman D.B. et al. 2004. Basal Ornithopoda. In Weishampel D.B., Dodson P., & Osmolska H. (eds). The Dinosauria. 2nd ed, Berkeley: University of California Press. 393-412
  2. Weishampel D.B. & Witmer L.M. 1990. Heterodontosauridae. In: Weishampel D.B., Dodson P., and Osmolska H. The Dinosauria 1st ed, Berkeley: University of California Press. 486-497
  3. Sereno, P.C. 1986. Phylogeny of the bird-hipped dinosaurs (Order Ornithischia). National Geographic Research 2: 234-256.
  4. Thulborn, R.A. 1970. The systematic position of the Triassic ornithischian dinosaur Lycorhinus angustidens. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 49: 235-245.
  5. Hopson, J.A. 1975. On the generic separation of the ornithischian dinosaurs Lycorhinus and Heterodontosaurus from the Stormberg Series (Upper Triassic) of South Africa. South African Journal of Science 71: 302-305.
  6. Thulborn, R.A. 1974. A new heterodontosaurid dinosaur (Reptilia: Ornithischia) from the Upper Triassic Red Beds of Lesotho. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society of London. 55: 151-175.