Kuszholia
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Kuszholia Temporal range: Late Cretaceous, 85Ma | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Aves |
Subclass: | †Enantiornithes |
Superorder: | †Euenantiornithes |
Family: | †Kuszholiidae Nesov, 1992 |
Genus: | †Kuszholia Nesov, 1992 |
Species: | † K. mengi |
Binomial name | |
Kuszholia mengi Nesov, 1992 | |
Kuszholia (meaning "Milky Way bird" after the Kazakh term for the Milky Way, kus zholi) is the name given to a genus of primitive birds or bird-like dinosaurs from the Late Cretaceous. They were possibly coelurosaurs close to the ancestry of birds, although most scientists have considered it an avialan (either a primitive ornithuran or enantiornithine). Fossils were found in the Bissekty Formation in the Kyzyl Kum desert of Uzbekistan.
The genus contains a single species, K. mengi; a separate family has been erected for it (Kuszholiidae). It is known only from a series of small vertebrae, with prominent hollow chambers (pneumaticity).[1]
References
- ↑ Nesov, L.A. (1992). "Record of the Localities of Mesozoic and Paleogene with Avian Remains in the USSR, and the description of New Findings." Russian Journal of Ornithology, 1: 7-50. [Article in Russian]
External links
- George Olshevsky on Kuszholia, from the Dinosaur Mailing List
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