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Showing results for tags 'lambeosaurine'.
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Nothing new but this was presented at the SVP conference late in 2020 and could be of interest to some. Nothing has been published the and all based on one isolated humerus. Additional discoveries are most likely needed to demonstrate they were in that fauna. A POSSIBLE LAMBEOSAURINE (HADROSAURIDAE: DINOSAURIA) HUMERUS FROM THE LATE MAASTRICHTIAN HELL CREEK FORMATION OF SOUTH DAKOTA Rolleri, L., Gates, Terry A., Zanno, Lindsay E. North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, Raleigh, North Carolina, U.S.A. Both hadrosaurine and lambeosaurine hadrosaurs were common components of Campanian faunas in North America. However, to date, only hadrosaurines (e.g., Edmontosaurus annectens) are definitely known to have survived into the late Maastrichtian on the continent. This is in contrast to the European and Asian record, where lambeosaurine species have been described from Maastrichtian formations (e.g., Amurosaurus, Charonosaurus, Blasisaurus), some of which are hypothesized to be closely related to North American species from the Campanian. Intriguing evidence of a lambeosaurine from the widely prospected Hell Creek Formation (late Maastrichtian) was presented nearly two decades ago, but these data have not yet been published. Here we describe a large, isolated humerus (NCSM 21814, North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences) discovered in 1998 in Harding County, South Dakota, that may provide additional evidence on this topic. NCMNS 21814 is robust, bearing a pronounced, triangular deltopectoral crest (DPC). The general proportions of this specimen do not compare well with Edmontosaurus, the only currently accepted hadrosaurid from the formation, and some aspects, particularly a robust well-developed DPC, resemble the morphology of lambeosaurines. In order to more accurately compare NCSM 21814 to other hadrosaurids, we utilized several sources of previously published humeral measurements. In the ratio of DPC length to humeral length, NCSM 21814 is most similar to saurolophine taxa such as Edmontosaurus. However, using morphometrics that include the breadth of the DPC as a variable, NCSM 21814 aligns with lambeosaurines. In addition, the shape of the DPC of NCSM is unusual, in being more triangular than quadrilateral. This morphology may represent an extreme for Edmontosaurus, or may be a feature of a new taxon. Regardless, the discovery of a morphologically atypical hadrosaurid humerus in the otherwise widely sampled Hell Creek Formation, demonstrates higher morphological disparity than © 2020 BY THE SOCIETY OF VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY 285 currently appreciated amongst hadrosaurids within one of the best studied Late Cretaceous ecosystems.
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I've been working on this for a while now. For the longest time I wanted to reconstruct a whole bunch of hadrosaur skulls digitally and also 3dprint them. I started with Amurosaurus riabinini, and now I'm done sculpting and 3D printing it! So here is the result. I've printed it at 1/6th scale (14.5 cm long). And I will be making a whole lot more hadrosaur skulls in the future.
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The first Hadrosauridae from the Maastrichtian of Morocco is described in this paper. Pretty cool, its a lambeosaurine called Ajnabia odysseus. From Ouled Abdoun Basin. Its also the first named hadrosaur from Africa. Hopefully will see some teeth on the market. Sorry its Paywalled https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0195667120303657 See below for additional images
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The left humerus of a juvenile hadrosaur. Found near Hamilton. The closest formation is Two Medicine formation. The deltopectoral crest seems fairly robust for such a young animal so I'm leaning towards this being Lambeosaurine instead of Saurolophine, which would make it most likely Hypacrosaurus. The shape also fits quite well with a juvenile Hypacrosaurus I have restored some small areas where there were large holes. But I have left the largest area of damage due to it being a little unclear as to how robust or slender that area would have been.
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The First Definite Lambeosaurine Bone From the Liscomb Bonebed of Upper Cretaceous Prince Creek Formation, Alaska is presented in this paper. Nothing spectacular just from a cool place Article https://www.eurekalert.org/multimedia/pub/197034.php Paper https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-41325-8?fbclid=IwAR0RTstNFgb9CWp6GdNEmGxb52k-44JZ5WfQMds2KgmFjY_mQc8wLF0BoP8
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