Name:
Theiophytalia
(Garden of the gods).
Phonetic: Thay-o-fy-tal-yah.
Named By: K. Brill & K. Carpenter -
2007.
Classification: Chordata, Reptilia, Dinosauria,
Ornithischia, Ornithopoda.
Species: T. kerri (type).
Diet: Herbivore.
Size: Reconstructed length of the skull about 46
centimetres long.
Known locations: USA, Colorado - Purgatoire
Formation (Lytle Member).
Time period: Aptian of the Cretaceous.
Fossil representation: Partial skull and lower jaws.
The
holotype skull of Theiophytalia was originally
described as belonging
to Camptosaurus
by Othniel Charles Marsh in 1886, and in 1909
used as a base to reconstruct Camptosaurus by
Charles W. Gilmore.
The problem here is that this skull is slightly different to other
known Camptosaurus skulls. Additionally, Camptosaurus
is known to
have lived in the late Jurassic, and originally this fit with the
skull because when it was delivered to Marsh it was recorded as coming
from the Morrison formation. However, when sections of the skull
were subjected to microscopic comparisons to other records of fossil
bearing formations, it was discovered that this skull did not come
from the Morrison Formation.
Instead
the skull was a near perfect match for the Purgatoire Formation
(specifically the Lytle Member). This meant that the individual
dinosaur that this skull came from lived at least thirty-nine million
years after Camptosaurus fossils disappear from the
fossil record.
This huge gulf in time combined to differences in the skull led to one
conclusion; that the skull represented a whole new genus of
dinosaur, and thus Theiophytalia was established
by Brill and
Carpenter in 2007.
With
a reconstructed skull length of about forty-six centimetres,
Theiophytalia would have been a medium to large
ornithopod dinosaur,
browsing upon vegetation growing at varying heights from the ground.
Theiophytalia may have come into occasional contact
with other
dinosaurs such as Tenontosaurus
and the armoured Gastonia
which were
around in this approximate portion of the United States at the same
time. Possible predatory threats to Theiophytalia
may have come
from dromaeosaurs
such as Deinonychus
to even the huge
Acrocanthosaurus.
Further reading
- A description of a new ornithopod from the Lytle Member of the
Purgatoire Formation (Lower Cretaceous) and a reassessment of the
skull of Camptosaurus. - Horns and Beaks:
Ceratopsian and
Ornithopod Dinosaurs 49-67. - K. Brill & K.
Carpenter - 2007.
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