Ceratosaurus

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Ceratosaurus
Fossil range: Late Jurassic
Image:Ceratosaurus sketch2.jpg
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Sauropsida
Superorder: Dinosauria
Order: Saurischia
Suborder: Theropoda
Infraorder: Ceratosauria
Family: Ceratosauridae
Genus: Ceratosaurus
Marsh, 1884
Species
  • C. nasicornis (type)
    Marsh, 1884
  • C. ingens
    (Janensch, 1920)
  • C. dentisulcatus
    Madsen & Wells, 2000
  • C. magnicornis
    Madsen & Wells, 2000

Ceratosaurus (pronounced /ˌsɛrətəˈsɔrəs/) meaning 'horned lizard', in reference to the horn on its nose (Greek keras/keratos meaning 'horn' and sauros meaning 'lizard'), was a large predatory dinosaur from the Late Jurassic Period, found in the Morrison Formation of North America, in Tanzania and Portugal. It was characterized by large jaws with blade-like teeth, a large, blade-like horn on the snout and a pair hornlets over the eyes. The forelimbs were powerfully built but very short. The bones of the sacrum were fused (synsacrum) and the pelvic bones were fused together and to this structure (Sereno 1997) (i.e. similar to modern birds). A row of small osteoderms was present down the middle of the back.[1]

Contents

[edit] Discovery and species

Ceratosaurus is known from the Cleveland Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry in central Utah and the Dry Mesa Quarry in Colorado. The type species, described by O. C. Marsh in 1884 and redescribed by Gilmore in 1920, is Ceratosaurus nasicornis. Two further species were described in 2000,[2] C. magnicornis, and dentisulcatus. Both are more powerfully built, more derived, and appear in slightly younger rocks than C. nasicornis. The Portuguese remains have recently been ascribed to C. dentisulcatus (Mateus et al 2006). More additional species, including C. ingens and C. stechowi have been described from less complete material.

Ceratosaurus species:

  • C. nasicornis (type)
  • C. dentisulcatus
  • C. magnicornis
  • C. ingens
  • C. stechowi
  • C. meriani

[edit] Paleobiology

Image:Ceratosaurus scale1.png
Relative sizes of humans and Ceratosaurus.

Ceratosaurus lived alongside dinosaurs such as Allosaurus, Torvosaurus, Apatosaurus, Diplodocus, and Stegosaurus. It may have competed with Allosaurus for prey, though it was smaller at around 6 to 8 meters (20-27 feet) in length, 2.5 meters (8 feet) tall, and weighing 500 kg up to 1 tonne; it would have occupied a distinctly separate niche from its larger cousin. Ceratosaurus had a longer, more flexible body, with a deep tail shaped like that of a crocodilian.[1] This suggests that it was a better swimmer than the stiffer Allosaurus. A recent study by Bakker[3] suggested that Ceratosaurus generally hunted aquatic prey, such as fish and crocodiles, although it had potential for feeding on large dinosaurs. The study also suggests that sometimes adults and juveniles ate together. This evidence is, of course, very debatable and Ceratosaurus tooth marks are very common on large, terrestrial dinosaur prey fossils. Another common theory is that Ceratosaurus preyed primarily on Dryosaurus, Camptosaurus, and other ornithopoda, since it was likely a lone hunter and incapable as such of bringing down adult sauropods.[citation needed] Scavenging from corpses, smaller predators, and after larger ones also likely accounted for some of its diet.

[edit] Classification

Image:Ceratosaurus nasicornis DB.jpg
Ceratosaurus nasicornis

Relatives of Ceratosaurus include Genyodectes, Elaphrosaurus, and the abelisaur Carnotaurus. The classification of Ceratosaurus and its immediate relatives has been under intense debate recently. Ceratosaurus is unique in its characters; it is too advanced and basal tetanuran-like to be a large, late coelophysoid; and too primitive in many manners to be a true carnosaur. Its closest relatives appear to be the abelisaurs from the Cretaceous, but again, Ceratosaurus is an enigma in its existing tens of millions of years before them with no obvious Early Cretaceous link between them.

Image:CeratosaurusSkeleton.jpg
Ceratosaurus skeleton from 1896, depicted in an erroneous upright position.

In the past, Ceratosaurus, the Cretaceous abelisaurs, and the primitive coelophysoids were all grouped together and called Ceratosauria, defined as "theropods closer to Ceratosaurus than to Aves". Recent evidence, however, has shown large distinctions between the later, larger and more advanced ceratosaurs and earlier forms like Coelophysis. While considered distant from birds among the theropods, Ceratosaurus and its kin were still very bird-like, and even had a more avian tarsus than Allosaurus. As with all dinosaurs, the more fossils found of these animals, the better their evolution and relationships can be understood.

[edit] In popular culture

See also: Cultural depictions of dinosaurs
Image:Ceratosaurus2.jpg
An outdated reconstruction of Ceratosaurus.
  • A Ceratosaurus battles a Triceratops in the 1966 remake of One Million Years B.C..
  • In the film When Dinosaurs Roamed America, a Ceratosaurus makes a few appearances as a predator, killing Dryosaurus and eating it, but is later killed and eaten by an Allosaurus.
  • In The Animal World (1956) a Ceratosaurus kills a Stegosaurus in battle, but is soon attacked by another Ceratosaurus trying to steal a meal. This scene ends with both Ceratosaurus falling to their deaths off the edge of a very high cliff.
  • Ceratosaurus is also featured in The Land That Time Forgot (1975) where it battles a Triceratops, and its sequel The People That Time Forgot (1977) in which Patrick Wayne's character rescues a cavegirl from two pursuing Ceratosaurus by driving the dinosaurs off with smoke bombs (after having failed to frighten them off by firing shots in the air once the Ceratosaurus' attention had been shifted to Patrick Wayne's party of explorers).
  • In the Rite of Spring segment of Fantasia, Ceratosaurus are shown as opportunistic predators attacking Stegosaurus and Diplodocus trapped in mud.

[edit] References

  • Mateus, O., Walen, A. & Antunes, M.T. (2006). The large theropod fauna of the Lourinhã Formation (Portugal) and its similarity to the Morrison Formation, with a description of a new species of Allosaurus. in Foster, J.R. and Lucas, S. G. R.M., eds., 2006, Paleontology and Geology of the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 36

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Gilmore CW. 1920, Osteology of the Carnivorous Dinosauria in the United States National Museum. United States National Museum Bulletin. 110, pages 1-154
  2. ^ Madsen JH, Welles SP. Ceratosaurus (Dinosauria, Therapoda), a Revised Osteology. Miscellaneous Publication. Utah Geological Survey. ISBN 1-55791-380-3
  3. ^ Bakker RT, Bir G (2004). "Dinosaur Crime Scene Investigations", in Currie PJ, Koppelhus EB, Shugar MA, Wright JL: Feathered Dragons. Indiana University Press, 301–342. ISBN 0-253-34373-9. .


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