- Quilmesaurus
Taxobox
name = "Quilmesaurus"
fossil_range =Late Cretaceous
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis = Sauropsida
superordo =Dinosaur ia
ordo =Saurischia
subordo =Theropoda
infraordo =Tetanurae ?
genus = "Quilmesaurus"
genus_authority = Coria, 2001
subdivision_ranks =Species
subdivision =
*"Q. curriei" Coria, 2001 (type)"Quilmesaurus" is a
genus oftheropod dinosaur from thePatagonia n UpperCretaceous (Campanian stage), a time when South American theropod assemblages were dominated byabelisaurid s andcarcharodontosaur s. However, the morphology of "Quilmesaurus" suggests it may have been atetanuran . Though only portions of the right leg have been recovered, this animal is estimated to have measured 5-6 meters (16-20 feet) in length. Theholotype (MPCA-PV-100; Museo Provincial Carlos Ameghino) consists of thedistal half of the rightfemur and a complete righttibia collected from theAllen Formation (Campanian -Maastrichtian ), Malarge Group, Neuquén Basin, at Salitral Ojo de Aqua, 40 kilometers south of Roca City, Río Negro Province, northernArgentina . The specimen came from thefluvial sandstone s at the bottom of the Allen Formation and was collected in the late 1980s by a field crew from theUniversidad Nacional Tucumán ."Quilmesaurus curriei" is distinguished by a highly specialized knee joint. The femur possess a strong, well-developed mediodistal crest, and the tibia has a hooked cnemial crest. There is evidently no fusion of the
proximal tarsal s, and the lateral maleous projects distally more than the internal maleous, presenting an asymmetrical profile. The presence of a notch in the distal articular surface of the tibia was cited by Coria (2001) as evidence of a possible relationship with basaltetanuran s. Thistaxon is notable as the youngest record for a non-avian theropod from Patagonia.The genus name derives from the
Quilme , a Native American people, and the species is named in honor of Dr. Phillip J. Currie, a Canadian theropod specialist. Other theropod material has been recovered from within these same strata and has also provisionally been referred to theTetanurae (Coria et Salgado,2005 ). Other dinosaur remains recovered from the Allen Formation includetitanosaur s ("Aeolosaurus "), a lambeosaurinehadrosaur , anodosaur id, and dinosaur eggs.References
*Coria, R. A. 2001. A new theropod from the Late Cretaceous of Patagonia. in Tanke, D. H. et Carpenter, K. (eds). 2001. "Mesozoic Vertebrate Life", Indiana University Press: 3-9.
*Coria, R. A. et. Salgado, L. 2005. Last Patagonian theropods. in Carpenter, K. 2005. "The Carnivorous Dinosaurs", Indiana University Press: 153-160.External links
* [http://www.users.qwest.net/~jstweet1/tetanurae.htm Thescelosaurus!]
* [http://www.dinosauria.com/dml/names/dinoq.htm Dinosauria]
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