Thursday, February 11, 2016

The Stories of February. Turanoceratops

  There is some confusion about Turanoceratops,‭ ‬given that we know that it was a ceratopsian dinosaur,‭ ‬but not all palaeontologists agree upon exactly what kind.‭ ‬Papers published by Sues and Averianov in‭ ‬2009‭ ‬support the idea that Turanoceratops was a transitional form that linked primitive ceratopsians of the Ceratopsoidea,‭ ‬with the more advanced ceratopsids‭ (‬think Triceratops,‭ ‬Styracosaurus,‭ ‬etc‭)‬.‭ ‬If correct then this would make Turanoceratops the first ceratopsid ceratopsian dinosaur known from Asia.
       A counter publication by Farke et al‭ (‬also published in‭ ‬2009‭)‬,‭ ‬was of the opinion that Turanoceratops was not a transitional form,‭ ‬but instead actually represented a sister group of ceratopsian dinosaurs,‭ ‬more distinct that primitive forms,‭ ‬yet distinct from ceratopsids.‭ ‬A second paper by Sues and Averimov refuted this,‭ ‬saying that the authors of the other paper were misidentifying the features seen on‭ ‬the‭ ‬Turanoceratops fossils.‭ ‬Then in‭ ‬2010‭ ‬a fourth paper was published by Xu et al which was of the opinion that Turanoceratops was more advanced than Zuniceratops‭ (‬a genus that represents the earliest known appearance of a horned dinosaur in North America‭)‬,‭ ‬yet was not advanced enough to be included within the Ceratopsidae.
       Classification issues aside,‭ ‬Turanoceratops was typical of early quadrupedal ceratopsian dinosaurs and at two meters long of a fairly small size.‭ ‬When compared to other genera,‭ ‬Turanoceratops is often credited as being similar to the aforementioned Zuniceratops.‭ ‬Turanoceratops would have lived in an ecosystem that also saw the presence of dinosaurs such as hadrosaurs,‭ ‬ankylosaurs,‭ ‬oviraptosaurs,‭ ‬ornithomimosaurs,‭ ‬troodonts and dromaeosaurs as well as other‭ ‬Mesozoic reptiles such as azhdarchid pterosaurs.

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