Texacephale

Texacephale
Temporal range: Late Campanian, 77 Ma
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Order: Ornithischia
Suborder: Pachycephalosauria
Family: Pachycephalosauridae
Genus: Texacephale
Longrich, Sankey & Tanke, 2010
Species:  T. langstoni
Binomial name
Texacephale langstoni
Longrich et al., 2010

Texacephale is a genus of basal pachycephalosaurid dinosaur from the Campanian stage of the Late Cretaceous. The type species is Texacephale langstoni; its fossils were discovered in the Aguja Formation and described in 2010 by Longrich, Sankey and Tanke. The generic name means Texas + "head" (cephale in Greek) in reference to its place of discovery, and the specific name honors Wann Langston.[1]

Discovery

The holotype specimen of Texacephale, LSUMNS 20010, is composed of fused frontals and parietals. A second specimen, LSUMNS 20012, is composed of an incomplete frontoparietal dome.[1] According to the team, the fossilized dome of the animal possessed a pair of flanges on the sides of the skull. The team interpreted these structures as "gears" that would help deal with stress on the bone during head-butting,[2] a hypothetical behavior that has been challenged by other authors in recent years.[3][4]

Phylogeny

Cladogram after Longrich, Sankey and Tanke (2010).[1]

Pachycephalosauridae


Stegoceras




Gravitholus



Colepiocephale





Texacephale



Hanssuesia




Sphaerotholus brevis




S. goodwini




S. edmontonense



S. bucholtzae





Pachycephalosaurini

Alaskacephale



Pachycephalosaurus




Stygimoloch



Dracorex






Tylocephale



Prenocephale




Homalocephale



Goyocephale



Wannanosaurus







See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Longrich, N.R., Sankey, J., and Tanke, D. (2010). "Texacephale langstoni, a new genus of pachycephalosaurid (Dinosauria: Ornithischia) from the upper Campanian Aguja Formation, southern Texas, USA". Cretaceous Research 31 (2): 274–284. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2009.12.002.
  2. Head-ramming dino had ‘gears’ in skull
  3. Dinosaur Study Makes No Butts About It / Round-skull species didn't bash heads
  4. Cranial histology of pachycephalosaurs (Ornithischia: Marginocephalia) reveals transitory structures inconsistent with head-butting behavior

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, September 02, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.