Name: Leaellynasaura
(Leaellyn's lizard).
Phonetic: Lee-ell-lin-ah-saw-rah.
Named By: Tom Rich and Patricia Vickers-Rich - 1989.
Classification: Chordata, Reptilia, Dinosauria,
Ornithischia, Ornithopoda, Hypsilophodontidae.
Species: L. amicagraphica (type).
Type: Herbivore.
Size: Roughly up to 1.5 meters long.
Known locations: Australia, Victoria.
Time period: Aptian and Albian of the Cretaceous.
Fossil representation: Numerous specimens including
a partial skeleton and skull.
Leaellynasaura
has been named after the daughter of its discoverers (the amicagraphica
part recognises the Friends of the Museum of Victoria and the National
Geographic Society which supplied funding for the research), and
represents a dinosaur that was adapted to life in the Antarctic
conditions of the early Cretaceous. Although back then the Antarctic
was not the frozen wasteland it is today, creatures living there would
still have had to adapt to prolonged periods of darkness and the
resulting climate that would have been cooler than the rest of the
world. The most obvious adaptation is a skull that appears to have
housed enlarged eyes that would have been able to process low light
levels, as can be seen in creatures alive today. With
a tail that is three
times longer than its body, Leaellynasauria has the
proportionately
longest tail among the known ornithischian dinosaurs.
Other
dinosaurs from australia include the predatory theropod Australovenator,
the ankylosaur
Minmi
and the sauropod
Rhoetosaurus
amongst many others.
Further reading
- Polar dinosaurs and biotas of the Early Cretaceous of southeastern
Australia. - National Geographic Research 5(1):15-53. - Tom H. Rich and
Patricia Vickers-Rich - 1989.
- Dinosaurs of Darkness. - Bloomington: Indiana University Press. - T.
Rich & P. Vickers-Rich - 2002.
- Postcranial osteology of Leaellynasaura amicagraphica
(Dinosauria;
Ornithischia) from the Early Cretaceous of southeastern Australia. -
Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 29(3): 33A. - M. Herne - 2009.
- A reappraisal of the Cretaceous non-avian dinosaur faunas from
Australia and New Zealand: evidence for their Gondwanan affinities. -
Journal of Systematic Palaeontology, 8 (2). - L. Federico L. Agnolin,
Martın D. Ezcurra, Diego F. Pais & Steven W. Salisbury - 2010.
- New small-bodied ornithopods (Dinosauria, Neornithischia) from the
Early Cretaceous Wonthaggi Formation (Strzelecki Group) of the
Australian-Antarctic rift system, with revision of Qantassaurus
intrepidus Rich and Vickers-Rich, 1999. - Journal of
Paleontology. 93
(3): 543–584. - Matthew C. Herne, Jay P. Nair, Alistair R.Evans
& Alan M. Tait - 2019.
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