Ligabueino

Ligabueino
Temporal range: Early Cretaceous, 125 Ma
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Order: Saurischia
Suborder: Theropoda
Superfamily: Abelisauroidea
Family: incertae sedis
Genus: Ligabueino
Species:  L. andesi
Binomial name
Ligabueino andesi
Bonaparte, 1996

Ligabueino (meaning "Ligabue's little one") is a genus of noasaurid dinosaur named after its discoverer, Italian doctor Giancarlo Ligabue. It is known only from an extremely fragmentary specimen, measuring 70 cm (2.3 ft) long. In spite of initial reports that it was an adult, the unfused vertebrae indicate that the specimen was a juvenile.[1] It was a theropod and lived during the Early Cretaceous Period, in what is now Patagonia. It is sometimes considered a member of the Noasauridae, but its remains are too fragmentary to show any unique similarities with that group. In 2011, Carrano and colleagues found that it could only be placed with any confidence in the larger group Abelisauroidea.[1]

Fragments found were: a femur, ilium, pubis, phalanx and neural arches of cervical, dorsal and caudal vertebrae.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Carrano, M.T., Loewen, M.A. and Sertic, J.J.W. (2011). "New Materials of Masiakasaurus knopfleri Sampson, Carrano, and Forster, 2001, and Implications for the Morphology of the Noasauridae (Theropoda: Ceratosauria). Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology, 95: 53pp.


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