Sunday, October 18, 2015

The horror of October. Valdoraptor

 When first described in‭ ‬1858‭ ‬by Richard Owen,‭ ‬the type specimen of Valdoraptor was interpreted as a foot belonging to the armoured dinosaur Hylaeosaurus.‭ ‬In‭ ‬1881,‭ ‬John Hulke scored nearer the mark by identifying the foot as belonging to a theropod dinosaur.‭ ‬From here the foot was attributed to Megalosaurus by Richard Lydekker in‭ ‬1888‭ ‬and then Altispinax by Friedrich von Huene in‭ ‬1923.‭ ‬Eventually in‭ ‬1991‭ ‬George Olshevsky created the Valdoraptor genus for the foot,‭ ‬but this was not the end of the confusion,‭ ‬as the foot has also been perceived to be similar to Neovenator and Eotyrannus.
       Despite this,‭ ‬the Valdoraptor foot has been more popularly interpreted as belonging to an ornithomimosaur.‭ ‬However this has caused confusion and uncertainty in itself.‭ ‬With only a foot,‭ ‬it is impossible to say how big Valdoraptor was or if it had any special features like skull crests or enlarged claws.‭ ‬We also can’t infer what it ate since the ornithomimosaurs may have been carnivores,‭ ‬herbivores or even omnivores depending upon the genus.‭ ‬A‭ ‬2014‭ ‬study‭ (‬Allain et al‭) ‬concerning Valdoraptor also speculated that this dinosaur may in fact be synonymous with the genus Thecocoelurus.
       Valdoraptor should not be confused with the similarly named Valdosaurus.

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