Tuesday, October 06, 2015

The horror of October. Rahiolisaurus

Named after a village near the location of the fossil site,‭ ‬Rahiolisaurus is still a surprisingly little known abelisaurid at the time of writing,‭ ‬despite it being around eight meters long.‭ ‬The fossils of this abelisaurid were originally considered to be remains of another abelisaurid named Indosuchus.‭ ‬As a large abelisaurid,‭ ‬Rahiolisaurus would have been comparable to Rajasaurus,‭ ‬another large theropod known from Lameta Formation.‭ ‬The two are separated by the simple observation that Rajasaurus is more robust‭ (‬heavily built‭) ‬than Rahiolisaurus.‭ ‬The Lameta Formation is also home to other genera including the sauropods Isisaurus and Lametasaurus amongst others,‭ ‬and it‭’‬s not impossible that Rahiolisaurus may have hunted these,‭ ‬particularly smaller juveniles.‭ ‬It would be interesting to find out why at least seven individuals of the same species were buried together.‭ ‬It could be that Rahiolisaurus lived in groups,‭ ‬or it could merely be that they had become stuck in some kind of predator trap.

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