Wednesday, December 09, 2015

The Giving of December. Vitakridrinda

  Described from very partial remains,‭ ‬Vitakridrinda is a difficult dinosaur to talk about other than it seems to have been an abelisaurid.‭ ‬Abelisaurs were the dominant type of theropods in the southern continents during the late Cretaceous while the tyrannosaurs dominated the North.‭ ‬Because of the abundance of late Cretaceous rocks in Asia,‭ ‬abelisaurids are becoming increasingly common,‭ ‬with several genera such as Rajasaurus,‭ ‬Indosuchus and Rahiolisaurus to name but three coming from the Lameta Formation of nearby India.‭ ‬The late Cretaceous deposits of Pakistan may one day yield an equally impressive collection of abelisaurid genera.
       In‭ ‬2006‭ ‬M.‭ ‬S.‭ ‬Malkani also named five new genera of titanosaur from the Pab Formation,‭ ‬Marisaurus‭, Balochisaurus,‭ ‬Sulaimanisaurus,‭ ‬Khetranisaurus and Pakisaurus,‭ ‬all described only from caudal vertebrae,‭ ‬though at least two have had additional fossils from other areas of the body attributed to them.‭ ‬As a predator,‭ ‬it is not inconceivable that Vitakridrinda may have attacked titanosaurs,‭ ‬particularly juveniles that were not fully grown.

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