- Aachenosaurus
The name "Aachenosaurus" refers to two
fossil ized fragments of material that were originally thought to be jaw fragments from a duck-billeddinosaur (ahadrosaur ). However, the fossils turned out to bepetrified wood , to the great embarrassment of the discoverer. The fossil's name means "Aachen lizard", named for the Aachenian deposits ofMoresnet (which was a neutral territory betweenBelgium andGermany ), where the fossils were found.Smets, G. (1888). "Notices palaeontologiques". "Ann.Soc. Science Brussels (Bulletin de la société Belge de Géologie de Paléontologie & D'Hydrologie)", 12 (2): pp. 193-214]History
"Aachenosaurus" was found and named by the scientist (and abbé) Gerard Smets, on
October 31 ,1888 , who named the type species "Aachenosaurus multidens". Based on these fragments he determined that the specimen was ahadrosaur reaching an estimated 4 to 5 meters in length which might have had dermal spines. He defended this conclusion, citing that the fossils had been examined visually with the naked eye, magnifying lenses and with the microscope. However, his error was soon demonstrated byLouis Dollo . Smets at first tried to defend his original identification but was again proven wrong by a neutral commission and withdrew from science completely from pure embarrassment.References
External links
* [http://www.dinodata.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=6092&Itemid=67 "Aachenosaurus" on DinoData]
ee also
*"
Succinodon "
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