Sellacoxa

Sellacoxa
Temporal range: Early Cretaceous, 140Ma
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Order: Ornithischia
Clade: Ornithopoda
Clade: Styracosterna
Genus: Sellacoxa
Carpenter & Ishida, 2010
Species
  • S. pauli Carpenter & Ishida, 2010 (type)

Sellacoxa is a genus of iguanodont dinosaur which existed in what is now England during the Early Cretaceous period (lower Valanginian stage, around 140 mya).[1]

Identified from a nearly complete right ilium, pubis, ischium, and thirteen articulated posterior dorsals and sacrals (holotype BMNH R 3788) found in May 1873 by John Hopkinson in the Old Roar Quarry, at Silverhill, near Hastings, from the lower Wadhurst Clay of East Sussex, England,[2] that David Norman (2010) regarded as an individual of Barilium.[3] It was named by Kenneth Carpenter and Yusuke Ishida in 2010 and the type species is Sellacoxa pauli.[1] The generic name means “saddle” (sella in Latin) + “hips” (coxa) in reference to the saddle-shaped ilium, and the specific name honors Gregory S. Paul for recognising that European iguanodont diversity is higher than previously assumed.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Carpenter, K. and Ishida, Y. (2010). "Early and "Middle" Cretaceous Iguanodonts in Time and Space" (PDF). Journal of Iberian Geology 36 (2): 145–164. doi:10.5209/rev_JIGE.2010.v36.n2.3.
  2. Hopkinson, J. (1874). "Excursion to Eastbourne and St. Leonards". Proceedings of the Geologists’ Association 3: 211–214. doi:10.1016/s0016-7878(74)80101-x.
  3. Norman, David B. (2010). "A taxonomy of iguanodontians (Dinosauria: Ornithopoda) from the lower Wealden Group (Cretaceous: Valanginian) of southern England" (PDF). Zootaxa 2489: 47–66.