Thursday, December 10, 2015

The Giving of December. Archaeoceratops

Archaeoceratops is yet another of the increasingly large number of basal ceratopsian dinosaur remains that are coming from Asia.‭ ‬These‭ ‬remains point to an Asian ancestral origin for all ceratopsians from Protoceratops of Mongolia,‭ ‬to huge and horned Triceratops and Styracosaurus of North America.‭
       Archaeoceratops however was very different to these larger later forms.‭ ‬First,‭ ‬Archaeoceratops seems to be better suited to a bipedal stance when walking,‭ ‬although it was probably quick to adopt a quadrupedal posture for feeding upon low vegetation.‭ ‬Grasses had not yet evolved so Archaeoceratops would have been a browser of low vegetation,‭ ‬something that would not change throughout the lineage of the ceratopsian dinosaurs.‭ ‬Despite its small size lack of horns and bipedal stance however,‭ ‬the early indications of how its descendants would form can already be seen in the size of the skull.‭ ‬This skull when compared to the proportions of similarly sized dinosaurs like the ornithopods actually appears to be too big for the body,‭ ‬and later quadrupedal ceratopsian dinosaurs would go down in natural history as having some of the proportionately largest skulls in relation to their overall body sizes.

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