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ornithopods

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Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2019
Journal of Paleontology (2019) 93 (3): 543–584.
... ornithopod, Galleonosaurus dorisae n. gen. n. sp. from craniodental remains. Five ornithopodan genera are now named from Victoria. Galleonosaurus dorisae n. gen. n. sp. is known from five maxillae, from which the first description of jaw growth in an Australian dinosaur is provided. The holotype...
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Journal Article
Journal: PALAIOS
Published: 01 February 1993
PALAIOS (1993) 8 (1): 31–44.
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1979
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1979) 16 (6): 1176–1186.
... , and typical of ornithopods in general, is lacking in Stegoceras and Pachycephalosaurus . The loss of this separation may be the result of head butting.The family Pachycephalosauridae possesses sufficient ornithopod characters to justify their retention in that suborder. It does, however, represent an aberrant...
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 1974
Journal of Paleontology (1974) 48 (5): 1048–1067.
Journal Article
Journal: Paleobiology
Published: 01 December 2006
Paleobiology (2006) 32 (4): 652–665.
... have resulted in different ecological and behavioral interpretations for ornithopod dinosaurs. To evaluate ossified tendon function, this study constructed finite element models of the vertebral column for two ornithopod taxa: Tenontosaurus , which shows the plesiomorphic condition of longitudinally...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 January 1990
Journal of Paleontology (1990) 64 (1): 164–165.
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Published: 01 May 2019
Table 5. Distribution of Australian ornithopods. VHFT2 = Victorian hypsilophodontid femur type 2; VOD2 = Victorian ornithopod dentary morphotype 2; VOD3 = Victorian ornithopod dentary morphotype 3; VOM4 = Victorian ornithopod maxilla morphotype 4; VOPC1 = Victorian ornithopod postcranium type 1
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Time-calibrated phylogeny of the ornithopods from the IW strict consensus cladogram (Fig. 25.2). Dashed lines indicate unknown times of Pangaean branch/lineage divergences prior to the middle Callovian. Time scale based on Cohen et al. (2013). Thick lines indicate taxon (graduated shaded lines) and clade (solid lines) durations (for sources, see Text S1). Aal = Aalenian; AF = Africa; Alb = Albian; AN = Antarctica; Apt = Aptian; AU = Australia; Baj = Bajocian; Bar = Barremian; Bat = Bathonian; Ber = Berriasian; Cal = Callovian; Cam = Campanian; Cen = Cenomanian; Con = Coniacian; Hau = Hauterivian; Kim = Kimmeridgian; LA = Laurasia; Maa = Maastrichtian; NZ = New Zealand; Oxf = Oxfordian; SA = South America; San = Santonian; Tit = Tithonian; Tur = Turonian; Val = Valanginian.
Published: 01 May 2019
Figure 28. Time-calibrated phylogeny of the ornithopods from the IW strict consensus cladogram ( Fig. 25.2 ). Dashed lines indicate unknown times of Pangaean branch/lineage divergences prior to the middle Callovian. Time scale based on Cohen et al. ( 2013 ). Thick lines indicate taxon (graduated
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Fig. 3.
Published: 29 August 2011
Fig. 3. Cheek teeth of basal ornithopods. Dentary or maxillary tooth of the Prince Creek Formation basal ornithopod UAMES 7863 in (A); labial, (B); lingual, and (C) and (D); mesial/distal views (if maxillary). (E) Dentary or maxillary tooth of the Prince Creek Formation basal ornithopod UAMES
Series: Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Published: 01 January 2016
DOI: 10.1144/SP434.10
EISBN: 9781862391581
... are recognized. Given the range of morphological variation and the presence of manus tracks, we reinterpret all the prints as being from an ornithopod rather than a theropod, as previously described. We assign the smaller (morphotype A, pes; morphotype B, manus) to Caririchnium billsarjeanti . The larger...
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Australian ornithopod occurrences: ETRW = Eric the Red West; VHFT2 = Victorian Hypsilophodontid Femur Type 2; VOD2 = Victorian ornithopod dentary morphotype 2; VOD3 = Victorian ornithopod dentary morphotype 3; VOM4 = Victorian ornithopod maxilla morphotype 4; VOPC1 = Victorian ornithopod postcranium 1 (NMV P185992/P185993); VOPC2 = Victorian ornithopod postcranium 2 (NMV P186047). See Table 5 for associated information on ornithopod occurrences.
Published: 01 May 2019
Figure 27. Australian ornithopod occurrences: ETRW = Eric the Red West; VHFT2 = Victorian Hypsilophodontid Femur Type 2; VOD2 = Victorian ornithopod dentary morphotype 2; VOD3 = Victorian ornithopod dentary morphotype 3; VOM4 = Victorian ornithopod maxilla morphotype 4; VOPC1 = Victorian
Journal Article
Published: 29 August 2011
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2011) 48 (9): 1342–1354.
...Fig. 3. Cheek teeth of basal ornithopods. Dentary or maxillary tooth of the Prince Creek Formation basal ornithopod UAMES 7863 in (A); labial, (B); lingual, and (C) and (D); mesial/distal views (if maxillary). (E) Dentary or maxillary tooth of the Prince Creek Formation basal ornithopod UAMES...
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A) Proximal end of adult ornithopod femur UTA-AASO-125 showing two pit marks. B) Large flake in broken distal end of same adult ornithopod femur. Arrow points to pit along midline of flake. C) Proximal end of juvenile ornithopod femur UTA-AASO-201 showing two potential pits (arrows). All scale bars equal 1 cm.
Published: 01 February 2012
FIGURE 3— A) Proximal end of adult ornithopod femur UTA-AASO-125 showing two pit marks. B) Large flake in broken distal end of same adult ornithopod femur. Arrow points to pit along midline of flake. C) Proximal end of juvenile ornithopod femur UTA-AASO-201 showing two potential pits (arrows
Journal Article
Journal: PALAIOS
Published: 01 February 1995
PALAIOS (1995) 10 (1): 3–15.
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 2025
Italian Journal of Geosciences (2025) 144 (2): 139–146.
... on the island of Bornholm (Denmark) has so far yielded tracks preserved as natural casts on the underside of sandstone beds, reflecting a dinosaurian fauna comprising two sizes of sauropods, a medium-sized theropod, thyrephorans and small ornithopods. The only skeletal evidence so far recovered from...
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Location of the Arlington Archosaur Site (AAS). At left is a composite stratigraphic column for the site. The lowermost horizon represents the peat bed containing the crocodyliform, turtle, and juvenile ornithopod remains. The horizon immediately above contained the bitten adult ornithopod bone in a paleosol complex, which also contains carbonate nodules and charcoal fragments.
Published: 01 February 2012
FIGURE 1— Location of the Arlington Archosaur Site (AAS). At left is a composite stratigraphic column for the site. The lowermost horizon represents the peat bed containing the crocodyliform, turtle, and juvenile ornithopod remains. The horizon immediately above contained the bitten adult
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(A) Sandstone filling Teredolites in wood enclosed within intensely burrowed muddy sandstone near the top of the tidal channel-fill. Located in Fig. 8. (B) Large tree root in highly dinoturbated silty fine sandstone at the top of the nonmarine succession at site 7 (Fig. 3). The coal bed above the root marks the boundary between freshwater and overlying brackish-water deposits. (C) Oyster bioherm at site 5 (Fig. 3), in which the density of attached oysters increases upward. The bioherm is abruptly overlain by dinoturbated fine sandstone, and a large sandstone-filled ornithopod track (outlined) is impressed into the top of the bioherm. Additional dinosaur tracks are visible above. Hammer is 33 cm long. (D) Plan view of sandstone cast of ornithopod track from the top surface of the oyster bioherm at site 5, shown in Fig. 7C. (E) side view of the same ornithopod track cast; arrow indicates sole of foot. (F) Intense dinoturbation, attributed to ornithopods, at the base of a lagoonal delta sandstone, 1.2 m below the ravinement surface at site 7 (Fig. 3). Lens cap in A, B, D–F is 63 mm in diameter.
Published: 29 June 2006
bed above the root marks the boundary between freshwater and overlying brackish-water deposits. (C) Oyster bioherm at site 5 (Fig.  3 ), in which the density of attached oysters increases upward. The bioherm is abruptly overlain by dinoturbated fine sandstone, and a large sandstone-filled ornithopod
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- Natural cast of a deeply impressed tridactyl ornithopod track (MGUH 34868). A, view from the side with cast oriented according to the original bedding plane. B, Underside of the cast, showing the morphology of the trackmaker’s foot. Anatomical details such as digital pads are weakly preserved. C. Interpretative drawing of C, indicating the shape of the foot and division into digital pads. D, Oblique section through the cast of the track, giving the false impression of elongation. E. Interpretative drawing of the oblique section. All pictures are reproduced at the same scale. Photos: Jesper Milàn.
Published: 01 June 2025
Fig. 2 - Natural cast of a deeply impressed tridactyl ornithopod track (MGUH 34868). A, view from the side with cast oriented according to the original bedding plane. B, Underside of the cast, showing the morphology of the trackmaker’s foot. Anatomical details such as digital pads are weakly
Series: Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Published: 01 January 2009
DOI: 10.1144/SP315.18
EISBN: 9781862395633
..., quadrupedal ornithopods from the earliest Cretaceous of Spain and smaller tracks of a quadruped of unknown age from Zimbabwe. The Thai and Canadian tracks are similar to the Early Jurassic (Liassic) ichnogenus Anomoepus and the small ornithopod tracks from the Late Jurassic of Spain. They are the only known...
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 2025
Rocky Mountain Geology (2025) 60 (1): 1–10.
... just above the centrum is interpreted as part of a neural arch that shares similarities to those of ornithopod dinosaurs such as Thescelosaurus or Edmontosaurus . The bone occurs near the top of a sequence capped by carbonaceous mudstone, interpreted to represent a pond- or swamp-like environment...
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