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Dinosaur

Dinosaurs are a diverse group of reptiles[note 1] of the clade Dinosauria. They first appeared during the Triassic period, between 243 and 233.23 million years ago (mya), although the exact origin and timing of the evolution of dinosaurs is a subject of active research. They became the dominant terrestrial vertebrates after the Triassic–Jurassic extinction event 201.3 mya and their dominance continued throughout the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods. The fossil record shows that birds are feathered dinosaurs, having evolved from earlier theropods during the Late Jurassic epoch, and are the only dinosaur lineage known to have survived the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event approximately 66 mya. Dinosaurs can therefore be divided into avian dinosaurs—birds—and the extinct non-avian dinosaurs, which are all dinosaurs other than birds.

Dinosaurs
Temporal range: Late TriassicPresent, 233.23 – 0 Mya (Range includes birds (Aves)) (Possible Middle Triassic record)
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Sauropsida
Clade: Archosauria
Clade: Avemetatarsalia
Clade: Ornithodira
Clade: Dinosauromorpha
Clade: Dinosauriformes
Clade: Dracohors
Clade: Dinosauria
Owen, 1842
Major groups
Dinosaurs and possible dinosaurs of uncertain affinity
Birds are avian dinosaurs, and in phylogenetic taxonomy are included in the group Dinosauria.

Dinosaurs are varied from taxonomic, morphological and ecological standpoints. Birds, at over 11,000 living species, are among the most diverse groups of vertebrates. Using fossil evidence, paleontologists have identified over 900 distinct genera and more than 1,000 different species of non-avian dinosaurs. Dinosaurs are represented on every continent by both extant species (birds) and fossil remains. Through the first half of the 20th century, before birds were recognized as dinosaurs, most of the scientific community believed dinosaurs to have been sluggish and cold-blooded. Most research conducted since the 1970s, however, has indicated that dinosaurs were active animals with elevated metabolisms and numerous adaptations for social interaction. Some were herbivorous, others carnivorous. Evidence suggests that all dinosaurs were egg-laying, and that nest-building was a trait shared by many dinosaurs, both avian and non-avian.

While dinosaurs were ancestrally bipedal, many extinct groups included quadrupedal species, and some were able to shift between these stances. Elaborate display structures such as horns or crests are common to all dinosaur groups, and some extinct groups developed skeletal modifications such as bony armor and spines. While the dinosaurs' modern-day surviving avian lineage (birds) are generally small due to the constraints of flight, many prehistoric dinosaurs (non-avian and avian) were large-bodied—the largest sauropod dinosaurs are estimated to have reached lengths of 39.7 meters (130 feet) and heights of 18 m (59 ft) and were the largest land animals of all time. The misconception that non-avian dinosaurs were uniformly gigantic is based in part on preservation bias, as large, sturdy bones are more likely to last until they are fossilized. Many dinosaurs were quite small, some measuring about 50 centimeters (20 inches) in length.

The first dinosaur fossils were recognized in the early 19th century, with the name "dinosaur" (meaning "terrible lizard") being coined by Sir Richard Owen in 1842 to refer to these "great fossil lizards".[7][8][9] Since then, mounted fossil dinosaur skeletons have been major attractions at museums worldwide, and dinosaurs have become an enduring part of popular culture. The large sizes of some dinosaurs, as well as their seemingly monstrous and fantastic nature, have ensured their regular appearance in best-selling books and films, such as Jurassic Park. Persistent public enthusiasm for the animals has resulted in significant funding for dinosaur science, and new discoveries are regularly covered by the media.

Definition

Under phylogenetic nomenclature, dinosaurs are usually defined as the group consisting of the most recent common ancestor (MRCA) of Triceratops and modern birds (Neornithes), and all its descendants.[10] It has also been suggested that Dinosauria be defined with respect to the MRCA of Megalosaurus and Iguanodon, because these were two of the three genera cited by Richard Owen when he recognized the Dinosauria.[11] Both definitions cover the same known genera: Dinosauria = Ornithischia + Saurischia. This includes major groups such as ankylosaurians (armored herbivorous quadrupeds), stegosaurians (plated herbivorous quadrupeds), ceratopsians (bipedal or quadrupedal herbivores with neck frills), pachycephalosaurians (bipedal herbivores with thick skulls), ornithopods (bipedal or quadrupedal herbivores including "duck-bills"), theropods (mostly bipedal carnivores and birds), and sauropodomorphs (mostly large herbivorous quadrupeds with long necks and tails).[12]

Birds are the sole surviving dinosaurs. In traditional taxonomy, birds were considered a separate class that had evolved from dinosaurs, a distinct superorder. However, most contemporary paleontologists reject the traditional style of classification based on anatomical similarity, in favor of phylogenetic taxonomy based on deduced ancestry, in which each group is defined as all descendants of a given founding genus.[13] Birds belong to the dinosaur subgroup Maniraptora, which are coelurosaurs, which are theropods, which are saurischians.[14]

Research by Matthew G. Baron, David B. Norman, and Paul M. Barrett in 2017 suggested a radical revision of dinosaurian systematics. Phylogenetic analysis by Baron et al. recovered the Ornithischia as being closer to the Theropoda than the Sauropodomorpha, as opposed to the traditional union of theropods with sauropodomorphs. This would cause sauropods and kin to fall outside traditional dinosaurs, so they re-defined Dinosauria as the last common ancestor of Triceratops horridus, Passer domesticus and Diplodocus carnegii, and all of its descendants, to ensure that sauropods and kin remain included as dinosaurs. They also resurrected the clade Ornithoscelida to refer to the group containing Ornithischia and Theropoda.[15][16]

General description

 
Triceratops skeleton, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County

Using one of the above definitions, dinosaurs can be generally described as archosaurs with hind limbs held erect beneath the body.[17] Other prehistoric animals, including pterosaurs, mosasaurs, ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs, and Dimetrodon, while often popularly conceived of as dinosaurs, are not taxonomically classified as dinosaurs.[18] Pterosaurs are distantly related to dinosaurs, being members of the clade Ornithodira. The other groups mentioned are, like dinosaurs and pterosaurs, members of Sauropsida (the reptile and bird clade), except Dimetrodon (which is a synapsid). None of them had the erect hind limb posture characteristic of true dinosaurs.[19]

Dinosaurs were the dominant terrestrial vertebrates of the Mesozoic Era, especially the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods. Other groups of animals were restricted in size and niches; mammals, for example, rarely exceeded the size of a domestic cat, and were generally rodent-sized carnivores of small prey.[20] Dinosaurs have always been recognized as an extremely varied group: over 900 non-avian dinosaur genera have been confidently identified (2018) with 1124 species (2016). Estimates put the total number of dinosaur genera preserved in the fossil record at 1850, nearly 75% still undiscovered,[21][22][23] and the number that ever existed (in or out of the fossil record) at 3,400.[24] A 2016 estimate put the number of dinosaur species living in the Mesozoic at 1,543–2,468,[25][26] compared to the number of modern-day birds (avian dinosaurs) at 10,806 species.[27]

Extinct dinosaurs, as well as modern birds, include genera which are herbivorous and others carnivorous, including seed-eaters, fish-eaters, insectivores, and omnivores. While dinosaurs were ancestrally bipedal (as are all modern birds), some evolved into quadrupeds, and others, such as Anchisaurus and Iguanodon, could walk as easily on two or four legs. Cranial modifications like horns and crests are common dinosaurian traits, and some extinct species had bony armor. Although the best-known genera are remarkable for their large size, many Mesozoic dinosaurs were human-sized or smaller, and modern birds are generally small in size. Dinosaurs today inhabit every continent, and fossils show that they had achieved global distribution by the Early Jurassic epoch at latest.[28] Modern birds inhabit most available habitats, from terrestrial to marine, and there is evidence that some non-avian dinosaurs (such as Microraptor) could fly or at least glide, and others, such as spinosaurids, had semiaquatic habits.[29]

Distinguishing anatomical features

While recent discoveries have made it more difficult to present a universally agreed-upon list of their distinguishing features, nearly all dinosaurs discovered so far share certain modifications to the ancestral archosaurian skeleton, or are clearly descendants of older dinosaurs showing these modifications. Although some later groups of dinosaurs featured further modified versions of these traits, they are considered typical for Dinosauria; the earliest dinosaurs had them and passed them on to their descendants. Such modifications, originating in the most recent common ancestor of a certain taxonomic group, are called the synapomorphies of such a group.[30]

 
Labeled diagram of a typical archosaur skull, the skull of Dromaeosaurus

A detailed assessment of archosaur interrelations by Sterling Nesbitt[31] confirmed or found the following twelve unambiguous synapomorphies, some previously known:

  • In the skull, a supratemporal fossa (excavation) is present in front of the supratemporal fenestra, the main opening in the rear skull roof
  • Epipophyses, obliquely backward-pointing processes on the rear top corners of the anterior (front) neck vertebrae behind the atlas and axis, the first two neck vertebrae
  • Apex of a deltopectoral crest (a projection on which the deltopectoral muscles attach) located at or more than 30% down the length of the humerus (upper arm bone)
  • Radius, a lower arm bone, shorter than 80% of humerus length
  • Fourth trochanter (projection where the caudofemoralis muscle attaches on the inner rear shaft) on the femur (thigh bone) is a sharp flange
  • Fourth trochanter asymmetrical, with distal, lower, margin forming a steeper angle to the shaft
  • On the astragalus and calcaneum, upper ankle bones, the proximal articular facet, the top connecting surface, for the fibula occupies less than 30% of the transverse width of the element
  • Exoccipitals (bones at the back of the skull) do not meet along the midline on the floor of the endocranial cavity, the inner space of the braincase
  • In the pelvis, the proximal articular surfaces of the ischium with the ilium and the pubis are separated by a large concave surface (on the upper side of the ischium a part of the open hip joint is located between the contacts with the pubic bone and the ilium)
  • Cnemial crest on the tibia (protruding part of the top surface of the shinbone) arcs anterolaterally (curves to the front and the outer side)
  • Distinct proximodistally oriented (vertical) ridge present on the posterior face of the distal end of the tibia (the rear surface of the lower end of the shinbone)
  • Concave articular surface for the fibula of the calcaneum (the top surface of the calcaneum, where it touches the fibula, has a hollow profile)

Nesbitt found a number of further potential synapomorphies and discounted a number of synapomorphies previously suggested. Some of these are also present in silesaurids, which Nesbitt recovered as a sister group to Dinosauria, including a large anterior trochanter, metatarsals II and IV of subequal length, reduced contact between ischium and pubis, the presence of a cnemial crest on the tibia and of an ascending process on the astragalus, and many others.[10]

 
Hip joints and hindlimb postures of: (left to right) typical reptiles (sprawling), dinosaurs and mammals (erect), and rauisuchians (pillar-erect)

A variety of other skeletal features are shared by dinosaurs. However, because they either are common to other groups of archosaurs or were not present in all early dinosaurs, these features are not considered to be synapomorphies. For example, as diapsids, dinosaurs ancestrally had two pairs of Infratemporal fenestrae (openings in the skull behind the eyes), and as members of the diapsid group Archosauria, had additional openings in the snout and lower jaw.[32] Additionally, several characteristics once thought to be synapomorphies are now known to have appeared before dinosaurs, or were absent in the earliest dinosaurs and independently evolved by different dinosaur groups. These include an elongated scapula, or shoulder blade; a sacrum composed of three or more fused vertebrae (three are found in some other archosaurs, but only two are found in Herrerasaurus);[10] and a perforate acetabulum, or hip socket, with a hole at the center of its inside surface (closed in Saturnalia tupiniquim, for example).[33][34] Another difficulty of determining distinctly dinosaurian features is that early dinosaurs and other archosaurs from the Late Triassic epoch are often poorly known and were similar in many ways; these animals have sometimes been misidentified in the literature.[35]

Dinosaurs stand with their hind limbs erect in a manner similar to most modern mammals, but distinct from most other reptiles, whose limbs sprawl out to either side.[36] This posture is due to the development of a laterally facing recess in the pelvis (usually an open socket) and a corresponding inwardly facing distinct head on the femur.[37] Their erect posture enabled early dinosaurs to breathe easily while moving, which likely permitted stamina and activity levels that surpassed those of "sprawling" reptiles.[38] Erect limbs probably also helped support the evolution of large size by reducing bending stresses on limbs.[39] Some non-dinosaurian archosaurs, including rauisuchians, also had erect limbs but achieved this by a "pillar-erect" configuration of the hip joint, where instead of having a projection from the femur insert on a socket on the hip, the upper pelvic bone was rotated to form an overhanging shelf.[39]

History of study

Pre-scientific history

Dinosaur fossils have been known for millennia, although their true nature was not recognized. The Chinese considered them to be dragon bones and documented them as such. For example, Huayang Guo Zhi (華陽國志), a gazetteer compiled by Chang Qu (常璩) during the Western Jin Dynasty (265–316), reported the discovery of dragon bones at Wucheng in Sichuan Province.[40] Villagers in central China have long unearthed fossilized "dragon bones" for use in traditional medicines.[41] In Europe, dinosaur fossils were generally believed to be the remains of giants and other biblical creatures.[42]

Early dinosaur research

 
William Buckland

Scholarly descriptions of what would now be recognized as dinosaur bones first appeared in the late 17th century in England. Part of a bone, now known to have been the femur of a Megalosaurus,[43] was recovered from a limestone quarry at Cornwell near Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, in 1676. The fragment was sent to Robert Plot, Professor of Chemistry at the University of Oxford and first curator of the Ashmolean Museum, who published a description in his The Natural History of Oxford-shire (1677).[44] He correctly identified the bone as the lower extremity of the femur of a large animal, and recognized that it was too large to belong to any known species. He, therefore, concluded it to be the femur of a huge human, perhaps a Titan or another type of giant featured in legends.[45][46] Edward Lhuyd, a friend of Sir Isaac Newton, published Lithophylacii Britannici ichnographia (1699), the first scientific treatment of what would now be recognized as a dinosaur when he described and named a sauropod tooth, "Rutellum impicatum",[47][48] that had been found in Caswell, near Witney, Oxfordshire.[49]

 
Sir Richard Owen's coining of the word dinosaur, in the 1842 revised version of his talk at an 1841 meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science.

Between 1815 and 1824, the Rev William Buckland, the first Reader of Geology at the University of Oxford, collected more fossilized bones of Megalosaurus and became the first person to describe a non-avian dinosaur in a scientific journal.[43][50] The second non-avian dinosaur genus to be identified, Iguanodon, was according to legend discovered in 1822 by Mary Ann Mantell – the wife of English geologist Gideon Mantell who in fact had required remains years earlier. Gideon Mantell recognized similarities between his fossils and the bones of modern iguanas. He published his findings in 1825.[51][52]

The study of these "great fossil lizards" soon became of great interest to European and American scientists, and in 1842 the English paleontologist Sir Richard Owen coined the term "dinosaur", using it to refer to the "distinct tribe or sub-order of Saurian Reptiles" that were then being recognized in England and around the world.[7][8][9][53][54] The term is derived from Ancient Greek δεινός (deinos) 'terrible, potent or fearfully great', and σαῦρος (sauros) 'lizard or reptile'.[53][55] Though the taxonomic name has often been interpreted as a reference to dinosaurs' teeth, claws, and other fearsome characteristics, Owen intended it also to evoke their size and majesty.[56] Owen recognized that the remains that had been found so far, Iguanodon, Megalosaurus and Hylaeosaurus, shared distinctive features, and so decided to present them as a distinct taxonomic group. As clarified by British geologist and historian Hugh Torrens, Owen had given a presentation about fossil reptiles to the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1841, but reports of the time show that Owen did not mention the word "dinosaur", nor recognize dinosaurs as a distinct group of reptiles in his address. He introduced the Dinosauria only in the revised text version of his talk published in April 1842.[7][8] With the backing of Prince Albert, the husband of Queen Victoria, Owen established the Natural History Museum, London, to display the national collection of dinosaur fossils and other biological and geological exhibits.[57]

Discoveries in North America

In 1858, William Parker Foulke discovered the first known American dinosaur, in marl pits in the small town of Haddonfield, New Jersey. (Although fossils had been found before, their nature had not been correctly discerned.) The creature was named Hadrosaurus foulkii. It was an extremely important find: Hadrosaurus was one of the first nearly complete dinosaur skeletons found (the first was in 1834, in Maidstone, England), and it was clearly a bipedal creature. This was a revolutionary discovery as, until that point, most scientists had believed dinosaurs walked on four feet, like other lizards. Foulke's discoveries sparked a wave of interests in dinosaurs in the United States, known as dinosaur mania.[58]

Dinosaur mania was exemplified by the fierce rivalry between Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh, both of whom raced to be the first to find new dinosaurs in what came to be known as the Bone Wars. This fight between the two scientists lasted for over 30 years, ending in 1897 when Cope died after spending his entire fortune on the dinosaur hunt. Many valuable dinosaur specimens were damaged or destroyed due to the pair's rough methods: for example, their diggers often used dynamite to unearth bones. Modern paleontologists would find such methods crude and unacceptable, since blasting easily destroys fossil and stratigraphic evidence. Despite their unrefined methods, the contributions of Cope and Marsh to paleontology were vast: Marsh unearthed 86 new species of dinosaur and Cope discovered 56, a total of 142 new species. Cope's collection is now at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, while Marsh's is at the Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale University.[59]

"Dinosaur renaissance" and beyond

 
John Ostrom's original restoration of Deinonychus, published in 1969

World War II caused a pause in palaeontological research; after the war, research attention was also diverted increasingly to fossil mammals rather than dinosaurs, which were seen as sluggish and cold-blooded.[60][61] At the end of the 1960s, however, the field of dinosaur research experienced a surge in activity that remains ongoing.[62] Several seminal studies led to this activity. First, John Ostrom discovered the bird-like dromaeosaurid theropod Deinonychus and described it in 1969. Its anatomy indicated that it was an active predator that was likely warm-blooded, in marked contrast to the then-prevailing image of dinosaurs.[60] Concurrently, Robert T. Bakker published a series of studies that likewise argued for active lifestyles in dinosaurs based on anatomical and ecological evidence (see § Physiology),[63][64] which were subsequently summarized in his 1986 book The Dinosaur Heresies.[65]

 
Paleontologist Robert T. Bakker with a mounted skeleton of a tyrannosaurid (Gorgosaurus libratus)

New revelations were supported by an increase in dinosaur discoveries. Major new dinosaur discoveries have been made by paleontologists working in previously unexplored regions, including India, South America, Madagascar, Antarctica, and most significantly China. Across theropods, sauropodomorphs, and ornithischians, the number of named genera began to increase exponentially in the 1990s.[21] As of 2008, over 30 new species of dinosaurs were named each year.[66] At least sauropodomorphs experienced a further increase in the number of named species in the 2010s, with an average of 9.3 new species having been named each year between 2009 and 2020. As a consequence, more sauropodomorphs were named between 1990 and 2020 than in all previous years combined.[67] These new localities also led to improvements in overall specimen quality, with new species being increasingly named not on scrappy fossils but on more complete skeletons, sometimes from multiple individuals. Better specimens also led to new species being invalidated less frequently.[66] Asian localities have produced the most complete theropod specimens,[68] while North American localities have produced the most complete sauropodomorph specimens.[67]

Prior to the dinosaur renaissance, dinosaurs were mostly classified using the traditional rank-based system of Linnaean taxonomy. The renaissance was also accompanied by the increasingly widespread application of cladistics, a more objective method of classification based on ancestry and shared traits, which has proved tremendously useful in the study of dinosaur systematics and evolution. Cladistic analysis, among other techniques, helps to compensate for an often incomplete and fragmentary fossil record.[69][70] Reference books summarizing the state of dinosaur research, such as David B. Weishampel and colleagues' The Dinosauria, made knowledge more accessible[71] and spurred further interest in dinosaur research. The release of the first and second editions of The Dinosauria in 1990 and 2004, and of a review paper by Paul Sereno in 1998, were accompanied by increases in the number of published phylogenetic trees for dinosaurs.[72]

Soft tissue and molecular preservation

 
An Edmontosaurus specimen's skin impressions found in 1999

Dinosaur fossils are not limited to bones, but also include imprints or mineralized remains of skin coverings, organs, and other tissues. Of these, skin coverings based on keratin proteins are most easily preserved because of their cross-linked, hydrophobic molecular structure.[73] Fossils of keratin-based skin coverings or bony skin coverings are known from most major groups of dinosaurs. Dinosaur fossils with scaly skin impressions have been found since the 19th century. Samuel Beckles discovered a sauropod forelimb with preserved skin in 1852 that was incorrectly attributed to a crocodile; it was correctly attributed by Marsh in 1888 and subject to further study by Reginald Hooley in 1917.[74] Among ornithischians, in 1884 Jacob Wortman found skin impressions on the first known specimen of Edmontosaurus annectens, which were largely destroyed during the specimen's excavation.[75] Owen and Hooley subsequently described skin impressions of Hypsilophodon and Iguanodon in 1885 and 1917.[74] Since then, scale impressions have been most frequently found among hadrosaurids, where the impressions are known from nearly the entire body across multiple specimens.[76]

 
Colour restoration of Sinosauropteryx
 
Colour restoration of Psittacosaurus

Starting from the 1990s, major discoveries of exceptionally preserved fossils in deposits known as conservation Lagerstätten contributed to research on dinosaur soft tissues.[77][78] Chiefly among these were the rocks that produced the Jehol (Early Cretaceous) and Yanliao (Mid-to-Late Jurassic) biotas of northeastern China, from which hundreds of dinosaur specimens bearing impressions of feather-like structures (both closely related to birds and otherwise, see § Origin of birds) have been described by Xing Xu and colleagues.[79][80] In living reptiles and mammals, pigment-storing cellular structures known as melanosomes are partially responsible for producing colouration.[81][82] Both chemical traces of melanin and characteristically shaped melanosomes have been reported from feathers and scales of Jehol and Yanliao dinosaurs, including both theropods and ornithischians.[83] This has enabled multiple full-body reconstructions of dinosaur colouration, such as for Sinosauropteryx[84] and Psittacosaurus[85] by Jakob Vinther and colleagues, and similar techniques have also been extended to dinosaur fossils from other localities.[81] (However, some researchers have also suggested that fossilized melanosomes represent bacterial remains.[86][87]) Stomach contents in some Jehol and Yanliao dinosaurs closely related to birds have also provided indirect indications of diet and digestive system anatomy (e.g., crops).[88][89] More concrete evidence of internal anatomy has been reported in Scipionyx from the Pietraroja Plattenkalk of Italy. It preserves portions of the intestines, colon, liver, muscles, and windpipe.[90]

 
Scipionyx fossil with intestines, Natural History Museum of Milan

Concurrently, a line of work led by Mary Higby Schweitzer, Jack Horner, and colleagues reported various occurrences of preserved soft tissues and proteins within dinosaur bone fossils. Various mineralized structures that likely represented red blood cells and collagen fibres had been found by Schweitzer and others in tyrannosaurid bones as early as 1991.[91][92][93] However, in 2005, Schweitzer and colleagues reported that a femur of Tyrannosaurus preserved soft, flexible tissue within, including blood vessels, bone matrix, and connective tissue (bone fibers) that had retained their microscopic structure.[94] This discovery suggested that original soft tissues could be preserved over geological time,[73] with multiple mechanisms having been proposed.[95] Later, in 2009, Schweitzer and colleagues reported that a Brachylophosaurus femur preserved similar microstructures, and immunohistochemical techniques (based on antibody binding) demonstrated the presence of proteins such as collagen, elastin, and laminin.[96] Both specimens yielded collagen protein sequences that were viable for molecular phylogenetic analyses, which grouped them with birds as would be expected.[96][97] The extraction of fragmentary DNA has also been reported for both of these fossils,[98] along with a specimen of Hypacrosaurus.[99] In 2015, Sergio Bertazzo and colleagues reported the preservation of collagen fibres and red blood cells in eight Cretaceous dinosaur specimens that did not show any signs of exceptional preservation, indicating that soft tissue may be preserved more commonly than previously thought.[100] Suggestions that these structures represent bacterial biofilms[101] have been rejected,[102] but cross-contamination remains a possibility that is difficult to detect.[103]

Evolutionary history

Origins and early evolution

 
The early dinosaurs Herrerasaurus (large), Eoraptor (small) and a Plateosaurus skull, from the Triassic

Dinosaurs diverged from their archosaur ancestors during the Middle to Late Triassic epochs, roughly 20 million years after the devastating Permian–Triassic extinction event wiped out an estimated 96% of all marine species and 70% of terrestrial vertebrate species approximately 252 million years ago.[104][105] The oldest dinosaur fossils known from substantial remains date to the Carnian epoch of the Triassic period and have been found primarily in the Ischigualasto and Santa Maria Formations of Argentina and Brazil, and the Pebbly Arkose Formation of Zimbabwe.[106]

The Ischigualasto Formation (radiometrically dated at 231-230 million years old[107]) has produced the early saurischian Eoraptor, originally considered a member of the Herrerasauridae[108] but now considered to be an early sauropodomorph, along with the herrerasaurids Herrerasaurus and Sanjuansaurus, and the sauropodomorphs Chromogisaurus, Eodromaeus, and Panphagia.[109] Eoraptor's likely resemblance to the common ancestor of all dinosaurs suggests that the first dinosaurs would have been small, bipedal predators.[110][111][112] The Santa Maria Formation (radiometrically dated to be older, at 233.23 million years old[113]) has produced the herrerasaurids Gnathovorax and Staurikosaurus, along with the sauropodomorphs Bagualosaurus, Buriolestes, Guaibasaurus, Macrocollum, Nhandumirim, Pampadromaeus, Saturnalia, and Unaysaurus.[109] The Pebbly Arkose Formation, which is of uncertain age but was likely comparable to the other two, has produced the sauropodomorph Mbiresaurus, along with an unnamed herrerasaurid.[106]

Less well-preserved remains of the sauropodomorphs Jaklapallisaurus and Nambalia, along with the early saurischian Alwalkeria, are known from the Upper Maleri and Lower Maleri Formations of India.[114] The Carnian-aged Chañares Formation of Argentina preserves primitive, dinosaur-like ornithodirans such as Lagosuchus and Lagerpeton in Argentina, making it another important site for understanding dinosaur evolution. These ornithodirans support the model of early dinosaurs as small, bipedal predators.[109][115] Dinosaurs may have appeared as early as the Anisian epoch of the Triassic, approximately 243 million years ago, which is the age of Nyasasaurus from the Manda Formation of Tanzania. However, its known fossils are too fragmentary to identify it as a dinosaur or only a close relative.[116] The referral of the Manda Formation to the Anisian is also uncertain. Regardless, dinosaurs existed alongside non-dinosaurian ornithodirans for a period of time, with estimates ranging from 5–10 million years[117] to 21 million years.[113]

When dinosaurs appeared, they were not the dominant terrestrial animals. The terrestrial habitats were occupied by various types of archosauromorphs and therapsids, like cynodonts and rhynchosaurs. Their main competitors were the pseudosuchians, such as aetosaurs, ornithosuchids and rauisuchians, which were more successful than the dinosaurs.[118] Most of these other animals became extinct in the Triassic, in one of two events. First, at about 215 million years ago, a variety of basal archosauromorphs, including the protorosaurs, became extinct. This was followed by the Triassic–Jurassic extinction event (about 201 million years ago), that saw the end of most of the other groups of early archosaurs, like aetosaurs, ornithosuchids, phytosaurs, and rauisuchians. Rhynchosaurs and dicynodonts survived (at least in some areas) at least as late as early –mid Norian and late Norian or earliest Rhaetian stages, respectively,[119][120] and the exact date of their extinction is uncertain. These losses left behind a land fauna of crocodylomorphs, dinosaurs, mammals, pterosaurians, and turtles.[10] The first few lines of early dinosaurs diversified through the Carnian and Norian stages of the Triassic, possibly by occupying the niches of the groups that became extinct.[12] Also notably, there was a heightened rate of extinction during the Carnian pluvial event.[121]

Evolution and paleobiogeography

 
The supercontinent Pangaea in the early Mesozoic (around 200 million years ago)

Dinosaur evolution after the Triassic followed changes in vegetation and the location of continents. In the Late Triassic and Early Jurassic, the continents were connected as the single landmass Pangaea, and there was a worldwide dinosaur fauna mostly composed of coelophysoid carnivores and early sauropodomorph herbivores.[122] Gymnosperm plants (particularly conifers), a potential food source, radiated in the Late Triassic. Early sauropodomorphs did not have sophisticated mechanisms for processing food in the mouth, and so must have employed other means of breaking down food farther along the digestive tract.[123] The general homogeneity of dinosaurian faunas continued into the Middle and Late Jurassic, where most localities had predators consisting of ceratosaurians, megalosauroids, and allosauroids, and herbivores consisting of stegosaurian ornithischians and large sauropods. Examples of this include the Morrison Formation of North America and Tendaguru Beds of Tanzania. Dinosaurs in China show some differences, with specialized metriacanthosaurid theropods and unusual, long-necked sauropods like Mamenchisaurus.[122] Ankylosaurians and ornithopods were also becoming more common, but primitive sauropodomorphs had become extinct. Conifers and pteridophytes were the most common plants. Sauropods, like earlier sauropodomorphs, were not oral processors, but ornithischians were evolving various means of dealing with food in the mouth, including potential cheek-like organs to keep food in the mouth, and jaw motions to grind food.[123] Another notable evolutionary event of the Jurassic was the appearance of true birds, descended from maniraptoran coelurosaurians.[14]

By the Early Cretaceous and the ongoing breakup of Pangaea, dinosaurs were becoming strongly differentiated by landmass. The earliest part of this time saw the spread of ankylosaurians, iguanodontians, and brachiosaurids through Europe, North America, and northern Africa. These were later supplemented or replaced in Africa by large spinosaurid and carcharodontosaurid theropods, and rebbachisaurid and titanosaurian sauropods, also found in South America. In Asia, maniraptoran coelurosaurians like dromaeosaurids, troodontids, and oviraptorosaurians became the common theropods, and ankylosaurids and early ceratopsians like Psittacosaurus became important herbivores. Meanwhile, Australia was home to a fauna of basal ankylosaurians, hypsilophodonts, and iguanodontians.[122] The stegosaurians appear to have gone extinct at some point in the late Early Cretaceous or early Late Cretaceous. A major change in the Early Cretaceous, which would be amplified in the Late Cretaceous, was the evolution of flowering plants. At the same time, several groups of dinosaurian herbivores evolved more sophisticated ways to orally process food. Ceratopsians developed a method of slicing with teeth stacked on each other in batteries, and iguanodontians refined a method of grinding with dental batteries, taken to its extreme in hadrosaurids.[123] Some sauropods also evolved tooth batteries, best exemplified by the rebbachisaurid Nigersaurus.[124]

There were three general dinosaur faunas in the Late Cretaceous. In the northern continents of North America and Asia, the major theropods were tyrannosaurids and various types of smaller maniraptoran theropods, with a predominantly ornithischian herbivore assemblage of hadrosaurids, ceratopsians, ankylosaurids, and pachycephalosaurians. In the southern continents that had made up the now-splitting supercontinent Gondwana, abelisaurids were the common theropods, and titanosaurian sauropods the common herbivores. Finally, in Europe, dromaeosaurids, rhabdodontid iguanodontians, nodosaurid ankylosaurians, and titanosaurian sauropods were prevalent.[122] Flowering plants were greatly radiating,[123] with the first grasses appearing by the end of the Cretaceous.[125] Grinding hadrosaurids and shearing ceratopsians became very diverse across North America and Asia. Theropods were also radiating as herbivores or omnivores, with therizinosaurians and ornithomimosaurians becoming common.[123]

The Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event, which occurred approximately 66 million years ago at the end of the Cretaceous, caused the extinction of all dinosaur groups except for the neornithine birds. Some other diapsid groups, including crocodilians, dyrosaurs, sebecosuchians, turtles, lizards, snakes, sphenodontians, and choristoderans, also survived the event.[126]

The surviving lineages of neornithine birds, including the ancestors of modern ratites, ducks and chickens, and a variety of waterbirds, diversified rapidly at the beginning of the Paleogene period, entering ecological niches left vacant by the extinction of Mesozoic dinosaur groups such as the arboreal enantiornithines, aquatic hesperornithines, and even the larger terrestrial theropods (in the form of Gastornis, eogruiids, bathornithids, ratites, geranoidids, mihirungs, and "terror birds"). It is often stated that mammals out-competed the neornithines for dominance of most terrestrial niches but many of these groups co-existed with rich mammalian faunas for most of the Cenozoic Era.[127] Terror birds and bathornithids occupied carnivorous guilds alongside predatory mammals,[128][129] and ratites are still fairly successful as mid-sized herbivores; eogruiids similarly lasted from the Eocene to Pliocene, becoming extinct only very recently after over 20 million years of co-existence with many mammal groups.[130]

Classification

 
Saurischian pelvis structure (left side)
 
Tyrannosaurus pelvis (showing saurischian structure – left side)
 
Ornithischian pelvis structure (left side)
 
Edmontosaurus pelvis (showing ornithischian structure – left side)

Dinosaurs belong to a group known as archosaurs, which also includes modern crocodilians. Within the archosaur group, dinosaurs are differentiated most noticeably by their gait. Dinosaur legs extend directly beneath the body, whereas the legs of lizards and crocodilians sprawl out to either side.[30]

Collectively, dinosaurs as a clade are divided into two primary branches, Saurischia and Ornithischia. Saurischia includes those taxa sharing a more recent common ancestor with birds than with Ornithischia, while Ornithischia includes all taxa sharing a more recent common ancestor with Triceratops than with Saurischia. Anatomically, these two groups can be distinguished most noticeably by their pelvic structure. Early saurischians—"lizard-hipped", from the Greek sauros (σαῦρος) meaning "lizard" and ischion (ἰσχίον) meaning "hip joint"—retained the hip structure of their ancestors, with a pubis bone directed cranially, or forward.[37] This basic form was modified by rotating the pubis backward to varying degrees in several groups (Herrerasaurus,[131] therizinosauroids,[132] dromaeosaurids,[133] and birds[14]). Saurischia includes the theropods (exclusively bipedal and with a wide variety of diets) and sauropodomorphs (long-necked herbivores which include advanced, quadrupedal groups).[29][134]

By contrast, ornithischians—"bird-hipped", from the Greek ornitheios (ὀρνίθειος) meaning "of a bird" and ischion (ἰσχίον) meaning "hip joint"—had a pelvis that superficially resembled a bird's pelvis: the pubic bone was oriented caudally (rear-pointing). Unlike birds, the ornithischian pubis also usually had an additional forward-pointing process. Ornithischia includes a variety of species that were primarily herbivores.

Despite the terms "bird hip" (Ornithischia) and "lizard hip" (Saurischia), birds are not part of Ornithischia. Birds instead belong to Saurischia, the "lizard-hipped" dinosaurs—birds evolved from earlier dinosaurs with "lizard hips".[30]

Taxonomy

The following is a simplified classification of dinosaur groups based on their evolutionary relationships, and those of the main dinosaur groups Theropoda, Sauropodomorpha and Ornithischia, compiled by Justin Tweet.[135] Further details and other hypotheses of classification may be found on individual articles.

  • Dinosauria
 
Restoration of six ornithopods; far left: Camptosaurus, left: Iguanodon, center background: Shantungosaurus, center foreground: Dryosaurus, right: Corythosaurus, far right (large) Tenontosaurus.
  • Ornithischia ("bird-hipped"; diverse bipedal and quadrupedal herbivores)
  • Thyreophora (armored dinosaurs; bipeds and quadrupeds)
  • Eurypoda (heavy, quadrupedal thyreophorans)
 
Restoration of four ceratopsids: top left – Triceratops, top right – Styracosaurus, bottom left – Anchiceratops, bottom right – Chasmosaurus.
  • Ceratopsidae (large, elaborately ornamented ceratopsians)
  • Chasmosaurinae (ceratopsids with enlarged brow horns)
  • Centrosaurinae (ceratopsids mostly characterized by frill and nasal ornamentation)
  • Ornithopoda (various sizes; bipeds and quadrupeds; evolved a method of chewing using skull flexibility and numerous teeth)
  • Elasmaria (mostly southern ornithopods with mineralized plates along the ribs; may be thescelosaurids)
  • Rhabdodontomorpha (with distinctive dentition)
  • Hadrosauriformes (ancestrally had a thumb spike; large quadrupedal herbivores, with teeth merged into dental batteries)
 
Restoration of four macronarian sauropods: from left to right Camarasaurus, Brachiosaurus, Giraffatitan, and Euhelopus
  • Sauropodomorpha (herbivores with small heads, long necks, and long tails)
  • Sauropoda (very large and heavy; quadrupedal)
  • Diplodocoidea (skulls and tails elongated; teeth typically narrow and pencil-like)
  • Dicraeosauridae (small, short-necked diplodocoids with enlarged cervical and dorsal vertebrae)
  • Diplodocidae (extremely long-necked)
  • Macronaria (boxy skulls; spoon- or pencil-shaped teeth)
  • Euhelopodidae (stocky, mostly Asian)
  • Titanosauria (diverse; stocky, with wide hips; most common in the Late Cretaceous of southern continents)
  • Coelophysoidea (early theropods; includes Coelophysis and close relatives)
  • †"Dilophosaur-grade neotheropods" (larger kink-snouted dinosaurs)
  • Averostra ("bird snouts")
  • Ceratosauria (generally elaborately horned carnivores that existed from the Jurassic to Cretaceous periods, originally included Coelophysoidea)
  • Abelisauridae (large abelisauroids with short arms and oftentimes elaborate facial ornamentation)
  • Noasauridae (diverse, generally light theropods; may include several obscure taxa)
  • Megaraptora (theropods with large hand claws; either carnosaurs or coelurosaurs, potentially tyrannosauroids)
  • Carnosauria (large meat-eating dinosaurs; megalosauroids sometimes included)
  • Coelurosauria (feathered theropods, with a range of body sizes and niches)
  • †"Nexus of basal coelurosaurs" (used by Tweet to denote well-known taxa with unstable positions at the base of Coelurosauria)
  • Tyrannoraptora ("tyrant thieves")
  • Ornithomimosauria (small-headed, mostly toothless, omnivorous or possible herbivores)
 
Restoration of six dromaeosaurid theropods: from left to right Microraptor, Velociraptor, Austroraptor, Dromaeosaurus, Utahraptor, and Deinonychus
  • Caenagnathidae (toothless oviraptorosaurs known from North America and Asia)
  • Oviraptoridae (characterized by two bony projections at the back of the mouth; exclusive to Asia)
  • Paraves (avialans and their closest relatives)
  • Microraptoria (characterized by large wings on both the arms and legs; may have been capable of powered flight)
  • Eudromaeosauria (hunters with greatly enlarged sickle claws)
  • Avialae (modern birds and extinct relatives)

Timeline of major groups

Timeline of major dinosaur groups per Holtz (2007).

QuaternaryNeogenePaleogeneCretaceousJurassicTriassicHolocenePleistocenePlioceneMioceneOligoceneEocenePaleoceneLate CretaceousEarly CretaceousLate JurassicMiddle JurassicEarly JurassicLate TriassicMiddle TriassicEarly TriassicOrnithopodaCeratopsiaPachycephalosauriaAnkylosauriaStegosauriaHeterodontosauridaeAvialaeDeinonychosauriaOviraptorosauriaTherizinosauriaAlvarezsauriaOrnithomimosauriaCompsognathidaeTyrannosauroideaMegaraptoraCarnosauriaMegalosauroideaCeratosauriaCoelophysoideaTitanosauriaBrachiosauridaeDiplodocoideaCetiosauridaeTuriasauriaVulcanodontidaeMassospondylidaeRiojasauridaePlateosauridaeGuaibasauridaeHerrerasauridaeQuaternaryNeogenePaleogeneCretaceousJurassicTriassicHolocenePleistocenePlioceneMioceneOligoceneEocenePaleoceneLate CretaceousEarly CretaceousLate JurassicMiddle JurassicEarly JurassicLate TriassicMiddle TriassicEarly Triassic

Paleobiology

Knowledge about dinosaurs is derived from a variety of fossil and non-fossil records, including fossilized bones, feces, trackways, gastroliths, feathers, impressions of skin, internal organs and other soft tissues.[90][94] Many fields of study contribute to our understanding of dinosaurs, including physics (especially biomechanics), chemistry, biology, and the Earth sciences (of which paleontology is a sub-discipline).[136][137] Two topics of particular interest and study have been dinosaur size and behavior.[138]

Size

 
Scale diagram comparing the average human to the longest known dinosaurs in five major clades:

Current evidence suggests that dinosaur average size varied through the Triassic, Early Jurassic, Late Jurassic and Cretaceous.[111] Predatory theropod dinosaurs, which occupied most terrestrial carnivore niches during the Mesozoic, most often fall into the 100 to 1000 kg (220 to 2200 lb) category when sorted by estimated weight into categories based on order of magnitude, whereas recent predatory carnivoran mammals peak in the 10 to 100 kg (22 to 220 lb) category.[139] The mode of Mesozoic dinosaur body masses is between 1 and 10 metric tons (1.1 and 11.0 short tons).[140] This contrasts sharply with the average size of Cenozoic mammals, estimated by the National Museum of Natural History as about 2 to 5 kg (4.4 to 11.0 lb).[141]

The sauropods were the largest and heaviest dinosaurs. For much of the dinosaur era, the smallest sauropods were larger than anything else in their habitat, and the largest was an order of magnitude more massive than anything else that has since walked the Earth. Giant prehistoric mammals such as Paraceratherium (the largest land mammal ever) were dwarfed by the giant sauropods, and only modern whales approach or surpass them in size.[142] There are several proposed advantages for the large size of sauropods, including protection from predation, reduction of energy use, and longevity, but it may be that the most important advantage was dietary. Large animals are more efficient at digestion than small animals, because food spends more time in their digestive systems. This also permits them to subsist on food with lower nutritive value than smaller animals. Sauropod remains are mostly found in rock formations interpreted as dry or seasonally dry, and the ability to eat large quantities of low-nutrient browse would have been advantageous in such environments.[143]

Largest and smallest

Scientists will probably never be certain of the largest and smallest dinosaurs to have ever existed. This is because only a tiny percentage of animals were ever fossilized and most of these remain buried in the earth. Few of the specimens that are recovered are complete skeletons, and impressions of skin and other soft tissues are rare. Rebuilding a complete skeleton by comparing the size and morphology of bones to those of similar, better-known species is an inexact art, and reconstructing the muscles and other organs of the living animal is, at best, a process of educated guesswork.[144]

 
Comparative size of Argentinosaurus to the average human

The tallest and heaviest dinosaur known from good skeletons is Giraffatitan brancai (previously classified as a species of Brachiosaurus). Its remains were discovered in Tanzania between 1907 and 1912. Bones from several similar-sized individuals were incorporated into the skeleton now mounted and on display at the Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin;[145] this mount is 12 meters (39 ft) tall and 21.8 to 22.5 meters (72 to 74 ft) long,[146][147] and would have belonged to an animal that weighed between 30000 and 60000 kilograms (70000 and 130000 lb). The longest complete dinosaur is the 27 meters (89 ft) long Diplodocus, which was discovered in Wyoming in the United States and displayed in Pittsburgh's Carnegie Museum of Natural History in 1907.[148] The longest dinosaur known from good fossil material is Patagotitan: the skeleton mount in the American Museum of Natural History in New York is 37 meters (121 ft) long. The Museo Municipal Carmen Funes in Plaza Huincul, Argentina, has an Argentinosaurus reconstructed skeleton mount that is 39.7 meters (130 ft) long.[149]

 
Maraapunisaurus, one of the largest animals to walk the earth.
 
Bruhathkayosaurus, potentially the largest terrestrial animal to ever exist.

There were larger dinosaurs, but knowledge of them is based entirely on a small number of fragmentary fossils. Most of the largest herbivorous specimens on record were discovered in the 1970s or later, and include the massive Argentinosaurus, which may have weighed 80000 to 100000 kilograms (88 to 110 short tons) and reached lengths of 30 to 40 meters (98 to 131 ft); some of the longest were the 33.5-meter (110 ft) long Diplodocus hallorum[143] (formerly Seismosaurus), the 33-to-34-meter (108 to 112 ft) long Supersaurus,[150] and 37-meter (121 ft) long Patagotitan; and the tallest, the 18-meter (59 ft) tall Sauroposeidon, which could have reached a sixth-floor window. There were a few dinosaurs that was considered either the heaviest and longest. The most famous one include Amphicoelias fragillimus, known only from a now lost partial vertebral neural arch described in 1878. Extrapolating from the illustration of this bone, the animal may have been 58 meters (190 ft) long and weighed 122400 kg (269800 lb).[143] However, recent research have placed Amphicoelias from the long, gracile diplodocid to the shorter but much stockier rebbachisaurid. Now renamed as Maraapunisaurus, this sauropod now stands as much as 40 meters (130 ft) long and weigh as much as 120000 kg (260000 lb).[151][152] Another contender of this title includes Bruhathkayosaurus matleyi, an incredibly controversial taxon that was recently confirmed to exist after archived photos were uncovered.[153] Bruhathkayosaurus was a titanosaur and would have most likely weighed more than even Marrapunisaurus. Recent size estimates in 2023 have placed this sauropod reaching lengths of up to 44 m (144 ft) long and a colossal weight range of around 110000170000 kg (240000370000 lb), if these upper estimates up true, Bruhathkayosaurus would have rivaled the blue whale and Perucetus colossus as one of the largest animals to have ever existed.[154]

The largest carnivorous dinosaur was Spinosaurus, reaching a length of 12.6 to 18 meters (41 to 59 ft), and weighing 7 to 20.9 metric tons (7.7 to 23.0 short tons).[155][156] Other large carnivorous theropods included Giganotosaurus, Carcharodontosaurus and Tyrannosaurus.[156] Therizinosaurus and Deinocheirus were among the tallest of the theropods. The largest ornithischian dinosaur was probably the hadrosaurid Shantungosaurus giganteus which measured 16.6 meters (54 ft).[157] The largest individuals may have weighed as much as 16 metric tons (18 short tons).[158]

 
An adult bee hummingbird, the smallest known dinosaur

The smallest dinosaur known is the bee hummingbird,[159] with a length of only 5 centimeters (2.0 in) and mass of around 1.8 g (0.063 oz).[160] The smallest known non-avialan dinosaurs were about the size of pigeons and were those theropods most closely related to birds.[161] For example, Anchiornis huxleyi is currently the smallest non-avialan dinosaur described from an adult specimen, with an estimated weight of 110 g (3.9 oz)[162] and a total skeletal length of 34 centimeters (1.12 ft).[161][162] The smallest herbivorous non-avialan dinosaurs included Microceratus and Wannanosaurus, at about 60 centimeters (2.0 ft) long each.[163][164]

Behavior

 
A nesting ground of the hadrosaur Maiasaura peeblesorum was discovered in 1978

Many modern birds are highly social, often found living in flocks. There is general agreement that some behaviors that are common in birds, as well as in crocodiles (closest living relatives of birds), were also common among extinct dinosaur groups. Interpretations of behavior in fossil species are generally based on the pose of skeletons and their habitat, computer simulations of their biomechanics, and comparisons with modern animals in similar ecological niches.[136]

The first potential evidence for herding or flocking as a widespread behavior common to many dinosaur groups in addition to birds was the 1878 discovery of 31 Iguanodon, ornithischians that were then thought to have perished together in Bernissart, Belgium, after they fell into a deep, flooded sinkhole and drowned.[165] Other mass-death sites have been discovered subsequently. Those, along with multiple trackways, suggest that gregarious behavior was common in many early dinosaur species. Trackways of hundreds or even thousands of herbivores indicate that duck-billed (hadrosaurids) may have moved in great herds, like the American bison or the African springbok. Sauropod tracks document that these animals traveled in groups composed of several different species, at least in Oxfordshire, England,[166] although there is no evidence for specific herd structures.[167] Congregating into herds may have evolved for defense, for migratory purposes, or to provide protection for young. There is evidence that many types of slow-growing dinosaurs, including various theropods, sauropods, ankylosaurians, ornithopods, and ceratopsians, formed aggregations of immature individuals. One example is a site in Inner Mongolia that has yielded remains of over 20 Sinornithomimus, from one to seven years old. This assemblage is interpreted as a social group that was trapped in mud.[168] The interpretation of dinosaurs as gregarious has also extended to depicting carnivorous theropods as pack hunters working together to bring down large prey.[169][170] However, this lifestyle is uncommon among modern birds, crocodiles, and other reptiles, and the taphonomic evidence suggesting mammal-like pack hunting in such theropods as Deinonychus and Allosaurus can also be interpreted as the results of fatal disputes between feeding animals, as is seen in many modern diapsid predators.[171]

 
Restoration of two Centrosaurus apertus engaged in intra-specific combat

The crests and frills of some dinosaurs, like the marginocephalians, theropods and lambeosaurines, may have been too fragile to be used for active defense, and so they were likely used for sexual or aggressive displays, though little is known about dinosaur mating and territorialism. Head wounds from bites suggest that theropods, at least, engaged in active aggressive confrontations.[172]

From a behavioral standpoint, one of the most valuable dinosaur fossils was discovered in the Gobi Desert in 1971. It included a Velociraptor attacking a Protoceratops,[173] providing evidence that dinosaurs did indeed attack each other.[174] Additional evidence for attacking live prey is the partially healed tail of an Edmontosaurus, a hadrosaurid dinosaur; the tail is damaged in such a way that shows the animal was bitten by a tyrannosaur but survived.[174] Cannibalism amongst some species of dinosaurs was confirmed by tooth marks found in Madagascar in 2003, involving the theropod Majungasaurus.[175]

Comparisons between the scleral rings of dinosaurs and modern birds and reptiles have been used to infer daily activity patterns of dinosaurs. Although it has been suggested that most dinosaurs were active during the day, these comparisons have shown that small predatory dinosaurs such as dromaeosaurids, Juravenator, and Megapnosaurus were likely nocturnal. Large and medium-sized herbivorous and omnivorous dinosaurs such as ceratopsians, sauropodomorphs, hadrosaurids, ornithomimosaurs may have been cathemeral, active during short intervals throughout the day, although the small ornithischian Agilisaurus was inferred to be diurnal.[176]

Based on fossil evidence from dinosaurs such as Oryctodromeus, some ornithischian species seem to have led a partially fossorial (burrowing) lifestyle.[177] Many modern birds are arboreal (tree climbing), and this was also true of many Mesozoic birds, especially the enantiornithines.[178] While some early bird-like species may have already been arboreal as well (including dromaeosaurids) such as Microraptor[179]) most non-avialan dinosaurs seem to have relied on land-based locomotion. A good understanding of how dinosaurs moved on the ground is key to models of dinosaur behavior; the science of biomechanics, pioneered by Robert McNeill Alexander, has provided significant insight in this area. For example, studies of the forces exerted by muscles and gravity on dinosaurs' skeletal structure have investigated how fast dinosaurs could run,[136] whether diplodocids could create sonic booms via whip-like tail snapping,[180] and whether sauropods could float.[181]

Communication

Modern birds are known to communicate using visual and auditory signals, and the wide diversity of visual display structures among fossil dinosaur groups, such as horns, frills, crests, sails, and feathers, suggests that visual communication has always been important in dinosaur biology.[182] Reconstruction of the plumage color of Anchiornis, suggest the importance of color in visual communication in non-avian dinosaurs.[183] Vocalization in non-avian dinosaurs is less certain. In birds, the larynx plays no role in sound production. Instead they vocalize with a novel organ called the syrinx, located further down the trachea.[184] The earliest remains of a syrinx was found in a specimen of the duck-like Vegavis iaai dated 69 –66 million years ago, and this organ is unlikely to have existed in non-avian dinosaurs.[185]

 
Restoration of a striking and unusual visual display in a Lambeosaurus magnicristatus. The crest could also have acted as a resonating chamber for sounds

Paleontologist Phil Senter has suggested that since non-avian dinosaurs did not have a syrinx, and their next closest living relatives, crocodilians, use the larynx, they could not vocalize as the common ancestor would have been mute. He states that they mostly on visual displays and possibly non-vocal acoustic sounds like hissing, jaw grinding or clapping, splashing and wing beating (possible in winged maniraptoran dinosaurs).[182] Other researchers have countered that vocalizations also exist in turtles, the closest relatives of archosaurs, suggesting that the trait is ancestral to their lineage. In addition, vocal communication in dinosaurs is indicated by the development of advanced hearing in nearly all major groups. Hence the syrinx may have supplemented and then replaced the larynx as a vocal organ rather than there being a "silent period" in bird evolution.[186]

In 2023, a fossilized larynx was described from a specimen of the ankylosaurid Pinacosaurus. The structure was composed of cricoid and arytenoid cartilages, similar to those of non-avian reptiles. However, the mobile cricoid-arytenoid joint and long arytenoid cartilages would have allowed for air-flow control similar to that of birds, and thus could have made bird-like vocalizations. In addition, the cartilages were ossified, implying that laryngeal ossification is a feature of some non-avian dinosaurs.[187] A 2016 study concludes that some dinosaurs may have produced closed mouth vocalizations like cooing, hooting and booming. These occur in both reptiles and birds and involve inflating the esophagus or tracheal pouches. Such vocalizations evolved independently in extant archosaurs numerous times, following increases in body size.[188] The crests of some hadrosaurids and the nasal chambers of ankylosaurids have been suggested to have functioned in acoustic resonance.[189][190]

Reproductive biology

 
Nest of a plover (Charadrius)

All dinosaurs laid amniotic eggs. Dinosaur eggs were usually laid in a nest. Most species create somewhat elaborate nests which can be cups, domes, plates, beds scrapes, mounds, or burrows.[191] Some species of modern bird have no nests; the cliff-nesting common guillemot lays its eggs on bare rock, and male emperor penguins keep eggs between their body and feet. Primitive birds and many non-avialan dinosaurs often lay eggs in communal nests, with males primarily incubating the eggs. While modern birds have only one functional oviduct and lay one egg at a time, more primitive birds and dinosaurs had two oviducts, like crocodiles. Some non-avialan dinosaurs, such as Troodon, exhibited iterative laying, where the adult might lay a pair of eggs every one or two days, and then ensured simultaneous hatching by delaying brooding until all eggs were laid.[192]

When laying eggs, females grow a special type of bone between the hard outer bone and the marrow of their limbs. This medullary bone, which is rich in calcium, is used to make eggshells. A discovery of features in a Tyrannosaurus skeleton provided evidence of medullary bone in extinct dinosaurs and, for the first time, allowed paleontologists to establish the sex of a fossil dinosaur specimen. Further research has found medullary bone in the carnosaur Allosaurus and the ornithopod Tenontosaurus. Because the line of dinosaurs that includes Allosaurus and Tyrannosaurus diverged from the line that led to Tenontosaurus very early in the evolution of dinosaurs, this suggests that the production of medullary tissue is a general characteristic of all dinosaurs.[193]

 
Fossil interpreted as a nesting oviraptorid Citipati at the American Museum of Natural History. Smaller fossil far right showing inside one of the eggs.

Another widespread trait among modern birds (but see below in regards to fossil groups and extant megapodes) is parental care for young after hatching. Jack Horner's 1978 discovery of a Maiasaura ("good mother lizard") nesting ground in Montana demonstrated that parental care continued long after birth among ornithopods.[194] A specimen of the oviraptorid Citipati osmolskae was discovered in a chicken-like brooding position in 1993,[195] which may indicate that they had begun using an insulating layer of feathers to keep the eggs warm.[196] An embryo of the basal sauropodomorph Massospondylus was found without teeth, indicating that some parental care was required to feed the young dinosaurs.[197] Trackways have also confirmed parental behavior among ornithopods from the Isle of Skye in northwestern Scotland.[198]

However, there is ample evidence of precociality or superprecociality among many dinosaur species, particularly theropods. For instance, non-ornithuromorph birds have been abundantly demonstrated to have had slow growth rates, megapode-like egg burying behavior and the ability to fly soon after birth.[199][200][201][202] Both Tyrannosaurus and Troodon had juveniles with clear superprecociality and likely occupying different ecological niches than the adults.[192] Superprecociality has been inferred for sauropods.[203]

Genital structures are unlikely to fossilize as they lack scales that may allow preservation via pigmentation or residual calcium phosphate salts. In 2021, the best preserved specimen of a dinosaur's cloacal vent exterior was described for Psittacosaurus, demonstrating lateral swellings similar to crocodylian musk glands used in social displays by both sexes and pigmented regions which could also reflect a signalling function. However, this specimen on its own does not offer enough information to determine whether this dinosaur had sexual signalling functions; it only supports the possibility. Cloacal visual signalling can occur in either males or females in living birds, making it unlikely to be useful to determine sex for extinct dinosaurs.[204]

Physiology

Because both modern crocodilians and birds have four-chambered hearts (albeit modified in crocodilians), it is likely that this is a trait shared by all archosaurs, including all dinosaurs.[205] While all modern birds have high metabolisms and are endothermic ("warm-blooded"), a vigorous debate has been ongoing since the 1960s regarding how far back in the dinosaur lineage this trait extended. Various researchers have supported dinosaurs as being endothermic, ectothermic ("cold-blooded"), or somewhere in between.[206] An emerging consensus among researchers is that, while different lineages of dinosaurs would have had different metabolisms, most of them had higher metabolic rates than other reptiles but lower than living birds and mammals,[207] which is termed mesothermy by some.[208] Evidence from crocodiles and their extinct relatives suggests that such elevated metabolisms could have developed in the earliest archosaurs, which were the common ancestors of dinosaurs and crocodiles.[209][210]

 
This 1897 restoration of Brontosaurus as an aquatic, tail-dragging animal, by Charles R. Knight, typified early views on dinosaur lifestyles.

After non-avian dinosaurs were discovered, paleontologists first posited that they were ectothermic. This was used to imply that the ancient dinosaurs were relatively slow, sluggish organisms, even though many modern reptiles are fast and light-footed despite relying on external sources of heat to regulate their body temperature. The idea of dinosaurs as ectothermic remained a prevalent view until Robert T. Bakker, an early proponent of dinosaur endothermy, published an influential paper on the topic in 1968. Bakker specifically used anatomical and ecological evidence to argue that sauropods, which had hitherto been depicted as sprawling aquatic animals with their tails dragging on the ground, were endotherms that lived vigorous, terrestrial lives. In 1972, Bakker expanded on his arguments based on energy requirements and predator-prey ratios. This was one of the seminal results that led to the dinosaur renaissance.[63][64][60][211]

One of the greatest contributions to the modern understanding of dinosaur physiology has been paleohistology, the study of microscopic tissue structure in dinosaurs.[212][213] From the 1960s forward, Armand de Ricqlès suggested that the presence of fibrolamellar bone—bony tissue with an irregular, fibrous texture and filled with blood vessels—was indicative of consistently fast growth and therefore endothermy. Fibrolamellar bone was common in both dinosaurs and pterosaurs,[214][215] though not universally present.[216][217] This has led to a significant body of work in reconstructing growth curves and modeling the evolution of growth rates across various dinosaur lineages,[218] which has suggested overall that dinosaurs grew faster than living reptiles.[213] Other lines of evidence suggesting endothermy include the presence of feathers and other types of body coverings in many lineages (see § Feathers); more consistent ratios of the isotope oxygen-18 in bony tissue compared to ectotherms, particularly as latitude and thus air temperature varied, which suggests stable internal temperatures[219][220] (although these ratios can be altered during fossilization[221]); and the discovery of polar dinosaurs, which lived in Australia, Antarctica, and Alaska when these places would have had cool, temperate climates.[222][223][224][225]

 
Comparison between the air sacs of an abelisaur and a bird

In saurischian dinosaurs, higher metabolisms were supported by the evolution of the avian respiratory system, characterized by an extensive system of air sacs that extended the lungs and invaded many of the bones in the skeleton, making them hollow.[226] Such respiratory systems, which may have appeared in the earliest saurischians,[227] would have provided them with more oxygen compared to a mammal of similar size, while also having a larger resting tidal volume and requiring a lower breathing frequency, which would have allowed them to sustain higher activity levels.[142] The rapid airflow would also have been an effective cooling mechanism, which in conjunction with a lower metabolic rate[228] would have prevented large sauropods from overheating. These traits may have enabled sauropods to grow quickly to gigantic sizes.[229][230] Sauropods may also have benefitted from their size—their small surface area to volume ratio meant that they would have been able to thermoregulate more easily, a phenomenon termed gigantothermy.[142][231]

Like other reptiles, dinosaurs are primarily uricotelic, that is, their kidneys extract nitrogenous wastes from their bloodstream and excrete it as uric acid instead of urea or ammonia via the ureters into the intestine. This would have helped them to conserve water.[207] In most living species, uric acid is excreted along with feces as a semisolid waste.[232][233] However, at least some modern birds (such as hummingbirds) can be facultatively ammonotelic, excreting most of the nitrogenous wastes as ammonia.[234] This material, as well as the output of the intestines, emerges from the cloaca.[235][236] In addition, many species regurgitate pellets,[237] and fossil pellets are known as early as the Jurassic from Anchiornis.[238]

The size and shape of the brain can be partly reconstructed based on the surrounding bones. In 1896, Marsh calculated ratios between brain weight and body weight of seven species of dinosaurs, showing that the brain of dinosaurs was proportionally smaller than in today's crocodiles, and that the brain of Stegosaurus was smaller than in any living land vertebrate. This contributed to the widespread public notion of dinosaurs as being sluggish and extraordinarily stupid. Harry Jerison, in 1973, showed that proportionally smaller brains are expected at larger body sizes, and that brain size in dinosaurs was not smaller than expected when compared to living reptiles.[239] Later research showed that relative brain size progressively increased during the evolution of theropods, with the highest intelligence – comparable to that of modern birds – calculated for the troodontid Troodon.[240]

Origin of birds

The possibility that dinosaurs were the ancestors of birds was first suggested in 1868 by Thomas Henry Huxley.[241] After the work of Gerhard Heilmann in the early 20th century, the theory of birds as dinosaur descendants was abandoned in favor of the idea of them being descendants of generalized thecodonts, with the key piece of evidence being the supposed lack of clavicles in dinosaurs.[242] However, as later discoveries showed, clavicles (or a single fused wishbone, which derived from separate clavicles) were not actually absent;[14] they had been found as early as 1924 in Oviraptor, but misidentified as an interclavicle.[243] In the 1970s, Ostrom revived the dinosaur–bird theory,[244] which gained momentum in the coming decades with the advent of cladistic analysis,[245] and a great increase in the discovery of small theropods and early birds.[32] Of particular note have been the fossils of the Jehol Biota, where a variety of theropods and early birds have been found, often with feathers of some type.[70][14] Birds share over a hundred distinct anatomical features with theropod dinosaurs, which are now generally accepted to have been their closest ancient relatives.[246] They are most closely allied with maniraptoran coelurosaurs.[14] A minority of scientists, most notably Alan Feduccia and Larry Martin, have proposed other evolutionary paths, including revised versions of Heilmann's basal archosaur proposal,[247] or that maniraptoran theropods are the ancestors of birds but themselves are not dinosaurs, only convergent with dinosaurs.[248]

Feathers

 
Various feathered non-avian dinosaurs, including Archaeopteryx, Anchiornis, Microraptor and Zhenyuanlong

Feathers are one of the most recognizable characteristics of modern birds, and a trait that was also shared by several non-avian dinosaurs. Based on the current distribution of fossil evidence, it appears that feathers were an ancestral dinosaurian trait, though one that may have been selectively lost in some species.[249] Direct fossil evidence of feathers or feather-like structures has been discovered in a diverse array of species in many non-avian dinosaur groups,[70] both among saurischians and ornithischians. Simple, branched, feather-like structures are known from heterodontosaurids, primitive neornithischians,[250] and theropods,[251] and primitive ceratopsians. Evidence for true, vaned feathers similar to the flight feathers of modern birds has been found only in the theropod subgroup Maniraptora, which includes oviraptorosaurs, troodontids, dromaeosaurids, and birds.[14][252] Feather-like structures known as pycnofibres have also been found in pterosaurs.[253]

However, researchers do not agree regarding whether these structures share a common origin between lineages (i.e., they are homologous),[254][255] or if they were the result of widespread experimentation with skin coverings among ornithodirans.[256] If the former is the case, filaments may have been common in the ornithodiran lineage and evolved before the appearance of dinosaurs themselves.[249] Research into the genetics of American alligators has revealed that crocodylian scutes do possess feather-keratins during embryonic development, but these keratins are not expressed by the animals before hatching.[257] The description of feathered dinosaurs has not been without controversy in general; perhaps the most vocal critics have been Alan Feduccia and Theagarten Lingham-Soliar, who have proposed that some purported feather-like fossils are the result of the decomposition of collagenous fiber that underlaid the dinosaurs' skin,[258][259][260] and that maniraptoran dinosaurs with vaned feathers were not actually dinosaurs, but convergent with dinosaurs.[248][259] However, their views have for the most part not been accepted by other researchers, to the point that the scientific nature of Feduccia's proposals has been questioned.[261]

Archaeopteryx was the first fossil found that revealed a potential connection between dinosaurs and birds. It is considered a transitional fossil, in that it displays features of both groups. Brought to light just two years after Charles Darwin's seminal On the Origin of Species (1859), its discovery spurred the nascent debate between proponents of evolutionary biology and creationism. This early bird is so dinosaur-like that, without a clear impression of feathers in the surrounding rock, at least one specimen was mistaken for the small theropod Compsognathus.[262] Since the 1990s, a number of additional feathered dinosaurs have been found, providing even stronger evidence of the close relationship between dinosaurs and modern birds. Many of these specimens were unearthed in the lagerstätten of the Jehol Biota.[255] If feather-like structures were indeed widely present among non-avian dinosaurs, the lack of abundant fossil evidence for them may be due to the fact that delicate features like skin and feathers are seldom preserved by fossilization and thus often absent from the fossil record.[263]

Skeleton

Because feathers are often associated with birds, feathered dinosaurs are often touted as the missing link between birds and dinosaurs. However, the multiple skeletal features also shared by the two groups represent another important line of evidence for paleontologists. Areas of the skeleton with important similarities include the neck, pubis, wrist (semi-lunate carpal), arm and pectoral girdle, furcula (wishbone), and breast bone. Comparison of bird and dinosaur skeletons through cladistic analysis strengthens the case for the link.[264]

Soft anatomy

 
Pneumatopores on the left ilium of Aerosteon riocoloradensis

Large meat-eating dinosaurs had a complex system of air sacs similar to those found in modern birds, according to a 2005 investigation led by Patrick M. O'Connor. The lungs of theropod dinosaurs (carnivores that walked on two legs and had bird-like feet) likely pumped air into hollow sacs in their skeletons, as is the case in birds. "What was once formally considered unique to birds was present in some form in the ancestors of birds", O'Connor said.[265][266] In 2008, scientists described Aerosteon riocoloradensis, the skeleton of which supplies the strongest evidence to date of a dinosaur with a bird-like breathing system. CT scanning of Aerosteon's fossil bones revealed evidence for the existence of air sacs within the animal's body cavity.[226][267]

Behavioral evidence

Fossils of the troodonts Mei and Sinornithoides demonstrate that some dinosaurs slept with their heads tucked under their arms.[268] This behavior, which may have helped to keep the head warm, is also characteristic of modern birds. Several deinonychosaur and oviraptorosaur specimens have also been found preserved on top of their nests, likely brooding in a bird-like manner.[269] The ratio between egg volume and body mass of adults among these dinosaurs suggest that the eggs were primarily brooded by the male, and that the young were highly precocial, similar to many modern ground-dwelling birds.[270]

Some dinosaurs are known to have used gizzard stones like modern birds. These stones are swallowed by animals to aid digestion and break down food and hard fibers once they enter the stomach. When found in association with fossils, gizzard stones are called gastroliths.[271]

Extinction of major groups

All non-avian dinosaurs and most lineages of birds[272] became extinct in a mass extinction event, called the Cretaceous–Paleogene (K-Pg) extinction event, at the end of the Cretaceous period. Above the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary, which has been dated to 66.038 ± 0.025 million years ago,[273] fossils of non-avian dinosaurs disappear abruptly; the absence of dinosaur fossils was historically used to assign rocks to the ensuing Cenozoic. The nature of the event that caused this mass extinction has been extensively studied since the 1970s, leading to the development of two mechanisms that are thought to have played major roles: an extraterrestrial impact event in the Yucatán Peninsula, along with flood basalt volcanism in India. However, the specific mechanisms of the extinction event and the extent of its effects on dinosaurs are still areas of ongoing research.[274] Alongside dinosaurs, many other groups of animals became extinct: pterosaurs, marine reptiles such as mosasaurs and plesiosaurs, several groups of mammals, ammonites (nautilus-like mollusks), rudists (reef-building bivalves), and various groups of marine plankton.[275][276] In all, approximately 47% of genera and 76% of species on Earth became extinct during the K-Pg extinction event.[277] The relatively large size of most dinosaurs and the low diversity of small-bodied dinosaur species at the end of the Cretaceous may have contributed to their extinction;[278] the extinction of the bird lineages that did not survive may also have been caused by a dependence on forest habitats or a lack of adaptations to eating seeds for survival.[279][280]

Pre-extinction diversity

Just before the K-Pg extinction event, the number of non-avian dinosaur species that existed globally has been estimated at between 628 and 1078.[281] It remains uncertain whether the diversity of dinosaurs was in gradual decline before the K-Pg extinction event, or whether dinosaurs were actually thriving prior to the extinction. Rock formations from the Maastrichtian epoch, which directly preceded the extinction, have been found to have lower diversity than the preceding Campanian epoch, which led to the prevailing view of a long-term decline in diversity.[275][276][282] However, these comparisons did not account either for varying preservation potential between rock units or for different extents of exploration and excavation.[274] In 1984, Dale Russell carried out an analysis to account for these biases, and found no evidence of a decline;[283] another analysis by David Fastovsky and colleagues in 2004 even showed that dinosaur diversity continually increased until the extinction,[284] but this analysis has been rebutted.[285] Since then, different approaches based on statistics and mathematical models have variously supported either a sudden extinction[274][281][286] or a gradual decline.[287][288] End-Cretaceous trends in diversity may have varied between dinosaur lineages: it has been suggested that sauropods were not in decline, while ornithischians and theropods were in decline.[289][290]

Impact event

 
Luis (left) and his son Walter Alvarez (right) at the K-T Boundary in Gubbio, Italy, 1981
 
The Chicxulub Crater at the tip of the Yucatán Peninsula; the impactor that formed this crater may have caused the dinosaur extinction.

The bolide impact hypothesis, first brought to wide attention in 1980 by Walter Alvarez, Luis Alvarez, and colleagues, attributes the K-Pg extinction event to a bolide (extraterrestrial projectile) impact.[291] Alvarez and colleagues proposed that a sudden increase in iridium levels, recorded around the world in rock deposits at the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary, was direct evidence of the impact.[292] Shocked quartz, indicative of a strong shockwave emanating from an impact, was also found worldwide.[293] The actual impact site remained elusive until a crater measuring 180 km (110 mi) wide was discovered in the Yucatán Peninsula of southeastern Mexico, and was publicized in a 1991 paper by Alan Hildebrand and colleagues.[294] Now, the bulk of the evidence suggests that a bolide 5 to 15 kilometers (3 to 9+12 miles) wide impacted the Yucatán Peninsula 66 million years ago, forming this crater[295] and creating a "kill mechanism" that triggered the extinction event.[296][297][298]

Within hours, the Chicxulub impact would have created immediate effects such as earthquakes,[299] tsunamis,[300] and a global firestorm that likely killed unsheltered animals and started wildfires.[301][302] However, it would also have had longer-term consequences for the environment. Within days, sulfate aerosols released from rocks at the impact site would have contributed to acid rain and ocean acidification.[303][304] Soot aerosols are thought to have spread around the world over the ensuing months and years; they would have cooled the surface of the Earth by reflecting thermal radiation, and greatly slowed photosynthesis by blocking out sunlight, thus creating an impact winter.[274][305][306] (This role was ascribed to sulfate aerosols until experiments demonstrated otherwise.[304]) The cessation of photosynthesis would have led to the collapse of food webs depending on leafy plants, which included all dinosaurs save for grain-eating birds.[280]

Deccan Traps

At the time of the K-Pg extinction, the Deccan Traps flood basalts of India were actively erupting. The eruptions can be separated into three phases around the K-Pg boundary, two prior to the boundary and one after. The second phase, which occurred very close to the boundary, would have extruded 70 to 80% of the volume of these eruptions in intermittent pulses that occurred around 100,000 years apart.[307][308] Greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide would have been released by this volcanic activity,[309][310] resulting in climate change through temperature perturbations of roughly 3 °C (5.4 °F) but possibly as high as 7 °C (13 °F).[311] Like the Chicxulub impact, the eruptions may also have released sulfate aerosols, which would have caused acid rain and global cooling.[312] However, due to large error margins in the dating of the eruptions, the role of the Deccan Traps in the K-Pg extinction remains unclear.[273][274][313]

Before 2000, arguments that the Deccan Traps eruptions—as opposed to the Chicxulub impact—caused the extinction were usually linked to the view that the extinction was gradual. Prior to the discovery of the Chicxulub crater, the Deccan Traps were used to explain the global iridium layer;[309][314] even after the crater's discovery, the impact was still thought to only have had a regional, not global, effect on the extinction event.[315] In response, Luis Alvarez rejected volcanic activity as an explanation for the iridium layer and the extinction as a whole.[316] Since then, however, most researchers have adopted a more moderate position, which identifies the Chicxulub impact as the primary progenitor of the extinction while also recognizing that the Deccan Traps may also have played a role. Walter Alvarez himself has acknowledged that the Deccan Traps and other ecological factors may have contributed to the extinctions in addition to the Chicxulub impact.[317] Some estimates have placed the start of the second phase in the Deccan Traps eruptions within 50,000 years after the Chicxulub impact.[318] Combined with mathematical modelling of the seismic waves that would have been generated by the impact, this has led to the suggestion that the Chicxulub impact may have triggered these eruptions by increasing the permeability of the mantle plume underlying the Deccan Traps.[319][320]

Whether the Deccan Traps were a major cause of the extinction, on par with the Chicxulub impact, remains uncertain. Proponents consider the climatic impact of the sulfur dioxide released to have been on par with the Chicxulub impact, and also note the role of flood basalt volcanism in other mass extinctions like the Permian-Triassic extinction event.[321][322] They consider the Chicxulub impact to have worsened the ongoing climate change caused by the eruptions.[323] Meanwhile, detractors point out the sudden nature of the extinction and that other pulses in Deccan Traps activity of comparable magnitude did not appear to have caused extinctions. They also contend that the causes of different mass extinctions should be assessed separately.[324] In 2020, Alfio Chiarenza and colleagues suggested that the Deccan Traps may even have had the opposite effect: they suggested that the long-term warming caused by its carbon dioxide emissions may have dampened the impact winter from the Chicxulub impact.[298]

Possible Paleocene survivors

Non-avian dinosaur remains have occasionally been found above the K-Pg boundary. In 2000, Spencer Lucas and colleagues reported the discovery of a single hadrosaur right femur in the San Juan Basin of New Mexico, and described it as evidence of Paleocene dinosaurs. The rock unit in which the bone was discovered has been dated to the early Paleocene epoch, approximately 64.8 million years ago.[325] If the bone was not re-deposited by weathering action, it would provide evidence that some dinosaur populations survived at least half a million years into the Cenozoic.[326] Other evidence includes the presence of dinosaur remains in the Hell Creek Formation up to 1.3 m (4.3 ft) above the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary, representing 40,000 years of elapsed time. This has been used to support the view that the K-Pg extinction was gradual.[327] However, these supposed Paleocene dinosaurs are considered by many other researchers to be reworked, that is, washed out of their original locations and then re-buried in younger sediments.[328][329][330] The age estimates have also been considered unreliable.[331]

Cultural depictions

 
Outdated Iguanodon statues created by Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins for the Crystal Palace Park in 1853
Gertie the Dinosaur (1914) by Winsor McCay, featuring the first animated dinosaur

By human standards, dinosaurs were creatures of fantastic appearance and often enormous size. As such, they have captured the popular imagination and become an enduring part of human culture. The entry of the word "dinosaur" into the common vernacular reflects the animals' cultural importance: in English, "dinosaur" is commonly used to describe anything that is impractically large, obsolete, or bound for extinction.[332]

Public enthusiasm for dinosaurs first developed in Victorian England, where in 1854, three decades after the first scientific descriptions of dinosaur remains, a menagerie of lifelike dinosaur sculptures was unveiled in London's Crystal Palace Park. The Crystal Palace dinosaurs proved so popular that a strong market in smaller replicas soon developed. In subsequent decades, dinosaur exhibits opened at parks and museums around the world, ensuring that successive generations would be introduced to the animals in an immersive and exciting way.[333] The enduring popularity of dinosaurs, in its turn, has resulted in significant public funding for dinosaur science, and has frequently spurred new discoveries. In the United States, for example, the competition between museums for public attention led directly to the Bone Wars of the 1880s and 1890s, during which a pair of feuding paleontologists made enormous scientific contributions.[334]

The popular preoccupation with dinosaurs has ensured their appearance in literature, film, and other media. Beginning in 1852 with a passing mention in Charles Dickens' Bleak House,[335] dinosaurs have been featured in large numbers of fictional works. Jules Verne's 1864 novel Journey to the Center of the Earth, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's 1912 book The Lost World, the 1914 animated film Gertie the Dinosaur (featuring the first animated dinosaur), the iconic 1933 film King Kong, the 1954 Godzilla and its many sequels, the best-selling 1990 novel Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton and its 1993 film adaptation are just a few notable examples of dinosaur appearances in fiction. Authors of general-interest non-fiction works about dinosaurs, including some prominent paleontologists, have often sought to use the animals as a way to educate readers about science in general. Dinosaurs are ubiquitous in advertising; numerous companies have referenced dinosaurs in printed or televised advertisements, either in order to sell their own products or in order to characterize their rivals as slow-moving, dim-witted, or obsolete.[336][337]

See also

Further reading

  • University of Southampton (September 29, 2021). "Two New Species of Large Predatory Dinosaur With Crocodile-Like Skulls Discovered on Isle of Wight". SciTechDaily.
  • Zhou, Zhonghe (October 2004). (PDF). Naturwissenschaften. Berlin: Springer Science+Business Media. 91 (10): 455–471. Bibcode:2004NW.....91..455Z. doi:10.1007/s00114-004-0570-4. ISSN 0028-1042. PMID 15365634. S2CID 3329625. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 21, 2011. Retrieved November 6, 2019.
  • Paul, Gregory S. (2002). Dinosaurs of the Air: The Evolution and Loss of Flight in Dinosaurs and Birds. Baltimore; London: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-6763-7. LCCN 2001000242. OCLC 1088130487..
  • Stewart, Tabori & Chang (1997). The Humongous Book of Dinosaurs. New York: Stewart, Tabori & Chang. ISBN 978-1-55670-596-0. LCCN 97000398. OCLC 1037269801.
  • Sternberg, Charles Mortram (1966) [Original edition published by E. Cloutier, printer to the King, 1946]. Canadian Dinosaurs. Geological Series. Vol. 54 (2nd ed.). Ottawa: National Museum of Canada. LCCN gs46000214. OCLC 1032865683.

Notes

  1. ^ Dinosaurs (including birds) are members of the natural group Reptilia. Their biology does not precisely correspond to the antiquated class Reptilia of Linnaean taxonomy, consisting of cold-blooded amniotes without fur or feathers. As Linnean taxonomy was formulated for modern animals prior to the study of evolution and paleontology, it fails to account for extinct animals with intermediate traits between traditional classes.

Bibliography

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  2. ^ Andrea Cau (2018). "The assembly of the avian body plan: a 160-million-year long process" (PDF). Bollettino della Società Paleontologica Italiana. 57 (1): 1–25. doi:10.4435/BSPI.2018.01.
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dinosaur, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, diverse, group, reptiles, note, clade, they, first, appeared, during, triassic, period, between, million, years, although, exact, origin, timing, evolution, dinosaurs, subject, active, research, they, beca. For other uses see Dinosaur disambiguation Not to be confused with Dinosaurus Dinosaurs are a diverse group of reptiles note 1 of the clade Dinosauria They first appeared during the Triassic period between 243 and 233 23 million years ago mya although the exact origin and timing of the evolution of dinosaurs is a subject of active research They became the dominant terrestrial vertebrates after the Triassic Jurassic extinction event 201 3 mya and their dominance continued throughout the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods The fossil record shows that birds are feathered dinosaurs having evolved from earlier theropods during the Late Jurassic epoch and are the only dinosaur lineage known to have survived the Cretaceous Paleogene extinction event approximately 66 mya Dinosaurs can therefore be divided into avian dinosaurs birds and the extinct non avian dinosaurs which are all dinosaurs other than birds DinosaursTemporal range Late Triassic Present 233 23 0 Mya Range includes birds Aves PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Possible Middle Triassic record Stegosaurus stenops a stegosaur Herrerasaurus ischigualastensis a carnivorous basal dinosaur Triceratops horridus a ceratopsian Apatosaurus louisae a sauropod Edmontosaurus regalis a hadrosaurid ornithopod Microraptor gui a dromaeosaurid theropod Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClade SauropsidaClade ArchosauriaClade AvemetatarsaliaClade OrnithodiraClade DinosauromorphaClade DinosauriformesClade DracohorsClade DinosauriaOwen 1842Major groups Ornithischia Sauropodomorpha Theropoda Various extinct groups Aves birds Dinosaurs and possible dinosaurs of uncertain affinity Alwalkeria Chilesaurus Chindesaurus Daemonosaurus Eodromaeus Nhandumirim Nyasasaurus Pisanosaurus Smok Tawa Thecospondylus Guaibasauridae Herrerasauria 1 2 Silesauridae paraphyletic 3 4 5 6 Birds are avian dinosaurs and in phylogenetic taxonomy are included in the group Dinosauria Dinosaurs are varied from taxonomic morphological and ecological standpoints Birds at over 11 000 living species are among the most diverse groups of vertebrates Using fossil evidence paleontologists have identified over 900 distinct genera and more than 1 000 different species of non avian dinosaurs Dinosaurs are represented on every continent by both extant species birds and fossil remains Through the first half of the 20th century before birds were recognized as dinosaurs most of the scientific community believed dinosaurs to have been sluggish and cold blooded Most research conducted since the 1970s however has indicated that dinosaurs were active animals with elevated metabolisms and numerous adaptations for social interaction Some were herbivorous others carnivorous Evidence suggests that all dinosaurs were egg laying and that nest building was a trait shared by many dinosaurs both avian and non avian While dinosaurs were ancestrally bipedal many extinct groups included quadrupedal species and some were able to shift between these stances Elaborate display structures such as horns or crests are common to all dinosaur groups and some extinct groups developed skeletal modifications such as bony armor and spines While the dinosaurs modern day surviving avian lineage birds are generally small due to the constraints of flight many prehistoric dinosaurs non avian and avian were large bodied the largest sauropod dinosaurs are estimated to have reached lengths of 39 7 meters 130 feet and heights of 18 m 59 ft and were the largest land animals of all time The misconception that non avian dinosaurs were uniformly gigantic is based in part on preservation bias as large sturdy bones are more likely to last until they are fossilized Many dinosaurs were quite small some measuring about 50 centimeters 20 inches in length The first dinosaur fossils were recognized in the early 19th century with the name dinosaur meaning terrible lizard being coined by Sir Richard Owen in 1842 to refer to these great fossil lizards 7 8 9 Since then mounted fossil dinosaur skeletons have been major attractions at museums worldwide and dinosaurs have become an enduring part of popular culture The large sizes of some dinosaurs as well as their seemingly monstrous and fantastic nature have ensured their regular appearance in best selling books and films such as Jurassic Park Persistent public enthusiasm for the animals has resulted in significant funding for dinosaur science and new discoveries are regularly covered by the media Contents 1 Definition 1 1 General description 1 2 Distinguishing anatomical features 2 History of study 2 1 Pre scientific history 2 2 Early dinosaur research 2 3 Discoveries in North America 2 4 Dinosaur renaissance and beyond 2 5 Soft tissue and molecular preservation 3 Evolutionary history 3 1 Origins and early evolution 3 2 Evolution and paleobiogeography 4 Classification 4 1 Taxonomy 4 2 Timeline of major groups 5 Paleobiology 5 1 Size 5 1 1 Largest and smallest 5 2 Behavior 5 3 Communication 5 4 Reproductive biology 5 5 Physiology 6 Origin of birds 6 1 Feathers 6 2 Skeleton 6 3 Soft anatomy 6 4 Behavioral evidence 7 Extinction of major groups 7 1 Pre extinction diversity 7 2 Impact event 7 3 Deccan Traps 7 4 Possible Paleocene survivors 8 Cultural depictions 9 See also 10 Further reading 11 Notes 12 Bibliography 13 ReferencesDefinitionUnder phylogenetic nomenclature dinosaurs are usually defined as the group consisting of the most recent common ancestor MRCA of Triceratops and modern birds Neornithes and all its descendants 10 It has also been suggested that Dinosauria be defined with respect to the MRCA of Megalosaurus and Iguanodon because these were two of the three genera cited by Richard Owen when he recognized the Dinosauria 11 Both definitions cover the same known genera Dinosauria Ornithischia Saurischia This includes major groups such as ankylosaurians armored herbivorous quadrupeds stegosaurians plated herbivorous quadrupeds ceratopsians bipedal or quadrupedal herbivores with neck frills pachycephalosaurians bipedal herbivores with thick skulls ornithopods bipedal or quadrupedal herbivores including duck bills theropods mostly bipedal carnivores and birds and sauropodomorphs mostly large herbivorous quadrupeds with long necks and tails 12 Birds are the sole surviving dinosaurs In traditional taxonomy birds were considered a separate class that had evolved from dinosaurs a distinct superorder However most contemporary paleontologists reject the traditional style of classification based on anatomical similarity in favor of phylogenetic taxonomy based on deduced ancestry in which each group is defined as all descendants of a given founding genus 13 Birds belong to the dinosaur subgroup Maniraptora which are coelurosaurs which are theropods which are saurischians 14 Research by Matthew G Baron David B Norman and Paul M Barrett in 2017 suggested a radical revision of dinosaurian systematics Phylogenetic analysis by Baron et al recovered the Ornithischia as being closer to the Theropoda than the Sauropodomorpha as opposed to the traditional union of theropods with sauropodomorphs This would cause sauropods and kin to fall outside traditional dinosaurs so they re defined Dinosauria as the last common ancestor of Triceratops horridus Passer domesticus and Diplodocus carnegii and all of its descendants to ensure that sauropods and kin remain included as dinosaurs They also resurrected the clade Ornithoscelida to refer to the group containing Ornithischia and Theropoda 15 16 General description nbsp Triceratops skeleton Natural History Museum of Los Angeles CountyUsing one of the above definitions dinosaurs can be generally described as archosaurs with hind limbs held erect beneath the body 17 Other prehistoric animals including pterosaurs mosasaurs ichthyosaurs plesiosaurs and Dimetrodon while often popularly conceived of as dinosaurs are not taxonomically classified as dinosaurs 18 Pterosaurs are distantly related to dinosaurs being members of the clade Ornithodira The other groups mentioned are like dinosaurs and pterosaurs members of Sauropsida the reptile and bird clade except Dimetrodon which is a synapsid None of them had the erect hind limb posture characteristic of true dinosaurs 19 Dinosaurs were the dominant terrestrial vertebrates of the Mesozoic Era especially the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods Other groups of animals were restricted in size and niches mammals for example rarely exceeded the size of a domestic cat and were generally rodent sized carnivores of small prey 20 Dinosaurs have always been recognized as an extremely varied group over 900 non avian dinosaur genera have been confidently identified 2018 with 1124 species 2016 Estimates put the total number of dinosaur genera preserved in the fossil record at 1850 nearly 75 still undiscovered 21 22 23 and the number that ever existed in or out of the fossil record at 3 400 24 A 2016 estimate put the number of dinosaur species living in the Mesozoic at 1 543 2 468 25 26 compared to the number of modern day birds avian dinosaurs at 10 806 species 27 Extinct dinosaurs as well as modern birds include genera which are herbivorous and others carnivorous including seed eaters fish eaters insectivores and omnivores While dinosaurs were ancestrally bipedal as are all modern birds some evolved into quadrupeds and others such as Anchisaurus and Iguanodon could walk as easily on two or four legs Cranial modifications like horns and crests are common dinosaurian traits and some extinct species had bony armor Although the best known genera are remarkable for their large size many Mesozoic dinosaurs were human sized or smaller and modern birds are generally small in size Dinosaurs today inhabit every continent and fossils show that they had achieved global distribution by the Early Jurassic epoch at latest 28 Modern birds inhabit most available habitats from terrestrial to marine and there is evidence that some non avian dinosaurs such as Microraptor could fly or at least glide and others such as spinosaurids had semiaquatic habits 29 Distinguishing anatomical features While recent discoveries have made it more difficult to present a universally agreed upon list of their distinguishing features nearly all dinosaurs discovered so far share certain modifications to the ancestral archosaurian skeleton or are clearly descendants of older dinosaurs showing these modifications Although some later groups of dinosaurs featured further modified versions of these traits they are considered typical for Dinosauria the earliest dinosaurs had them and passed them on to their descendants Such modifications originating in the most recent common ancestor of a certain taxonomic group are called the synapomorphies of such a group 30 nbsp Labeled diagram of a typical archosaur skull the skull of DromaeosaurusA detailed assessment of archosaur interrelations by Sterling Nesbitt 31 confirmed or found the following twelve unambiguous synapomorphies some previously known In the skull a supratemporal fossa excavation is present in front of the supratemporal fenestra the main opening in the rear skull roof Epipophyses obliquely backward pointing processes on the rear top corners of the anterior front neck vertebrae behind the atlas and axis the first two neck vertebrae Apex of a deltopectoral crest a projection on which the deltopectoral muscles attach located at or more than 30 down the length of the humerus upper arm bone Radius a lower arm bone shorter than 80 of humerus length Fourth trochanter projection where the caudofemoralis muscle attaches on the inner rear shaft on the femur thigh bone is a sharp flange Fourth trochanter asymmetrical with distal lower margin forming a steeper angle to the shaft On the astragalus and calcaneum upper ankle bones the proximal articular facet the top connecting surface for the fibula occupies less than 30 of the transverse width of the element Exoccipitals bones at the back of the skull do not meet along the midline on the floor of the endocranial cavity the inner space of the braincase In the pelvis the proximal articular surfaces of the ischium with the ilium and the pubis are separated by a large concave surface on the upper side of the ischium a part of the open hip joint is located between the contacts with the pubic bone and the ilium Cnemial crest on the tibia protruding part of the top surface of the shinbone arcs anterolaterally curves to the front and the outer side Distinct proximodistally oriented vertical ridge present on the posterior face of the distal end of the tibia the rear surface of the lower end of the shinbone Concave articular surface for the fibula of the calcaneum the top surface of the calcaneum where it touches the fibula has a hollow profile Nesbitt found a number of further potential synapomorphies and discounted a number of synapomorphies previously suggested Some of these are also present in silesaurids which Nesbitt recovered as a sister group to Dinosauria including a large anterior trochanter metatarsals II and IV of subequal length reduced contact between ischium and pubis the presence of a cnemial crest on the tibia and of an ascending process on the astragalus and many others 10 nbsp Hip joints and hindlimb postures of left to right typical reptiles sprawling dinosaurs and mammals erect and rauisuchians pillar erect A variety of other skeletal features are shared by dinosaurs However because they either are common to other groups of archosaurs or were not present in all early dinosaurs these features are not considered to be synapomorphies For example as diapsids dinosaurs ancestrally had two pairs of Infratemporal fenestrae openings in the skull behind the eyes and as members of the diapsid group Archosauria had additional openings in the snout and lower jaw 32 Additionally several characteristics once thought to be synapomorphies are now known to have appeared before dinosaurs or were absent in the earliest dinosaurs and independently evolved by different dinosaur groups These include an elongated scapula or shoulder blade a sacrum composed of three or more fused vertebrae three are found in some other archosaurs but only two are found in Herrerasaurus 10 and a perforate acetabulum or hip socket with a hole at the center of its inside surface closed in Saturnalia tupiniquim for example 33 34 Another difficulty of determining distinctly dinosaurian features is that early dinosaurs and other archosaurs from the Late Triassic epoch are often poorly known and were similar in many ways these animals have sometimes been misidentified in the literature 35 Dinosaurs stand with their hind limbs erect in a manner similar to most modern mammals but distinct from most other reptiles whose limbs sprawl out to either side 36 This posture is due to the development of a laterally facing recess in the pelvis usually an open socket and a corresponding inwardly facing distinct head on the femur 37 Their erect posture enabled early dinosaurs to breathe easily while moving which likely permitted stamina and activity levels that surpassed those of sprawling reptiles 38 Erect limbs probably also helped support the evolution of large size by reducing bending stresses on limbs 39 Some non dinosaurian archosaurs including rauisuchians also had erect limbs but achieved this by a pillar erect configuration of the hip joint where instead of having a projection from the femur insert on a socket on the hip the upper pelvic bone was rotated to form an overhanging shelf 39 History of studyFurther information History of paleontology Pre scientific history Dinosaur fossils have been known for millennia although their true nature was not recognized The Chinese considered them to be dragon bones and documented them as such For example Huayang Guo Zhi 華陽國志 a gazetteer compiled by Chang Qu 常璩 during the Western Jin Dynasty 265 316 reported the discovery of dragon bones at Wucheng in Sichuan Province 40 Villagers in central China have long unearthed fossilized dragon bones for use in traditional medicines 41 In Europe dinosaur fossils were generally believed to be the remains of giants and other biblical creatures 42 Early dinosaur research nbsp William BucklandScholarly descriptions of what would now be recognized as dinosaur bones first appeared in the late 17th century in England Part of a bone now known to have been the femur of a Megalosaurus 43 was recovered from a limestone quarry at Cornwell near Chipping Norton Oxfordshire in 1676 The fragment was sent to Robert Plot Professor of Chemistry at the University of Oxford and first curator of the Ashmolean Museum who published a description in his The Natural History of Oxford shire 1677 44 He correctly identified the bone as the lower extremity of the femur of a large animal and recognized that it was too large to belong to any known species He therefore concluded it to be the femur of a huge human perhaps a Titan or another type of giant featured in legends 45 46 Edward Lhuyd a friend of Sir Isaac Newton published Lithophylacii Britannici ichnographia 1699 the first scientific treatment of what would now be recognized as a dinosaur when he described and named a sauropod tooth Rutellum impicatum 47 48 that had been found in Caswell near Witney Oxfordshire 49 nbsp Sir Richard Owen s coining of the word dinosaur in the 1842 revised version of his talk at an 1841 meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science Between 1815 and 1824 the Rev William Buckland the first Reader of Geology at the University of Oxford collected more fossilized bones of Megalosaurus and became the first person to describe a non avian dinosaur in a scientific journal 43 50 The second non avian dinosaur genus to be identified Iguanodon was according to legend discovered in 1822 by Mary Ann Mantell the wife of English geologist Gideon Mantell who in fact had required remains years earlier Gideon Mantell recognized similarities between his fossils and the bones of modern iguanas He published his findings in 1825 51 52 The study of these great fossil lizards soon became of great interest to European and American scientists and in 1842 the English paleontologist Sir Richard Owen coined the term dinosaur using it to refer to the distinct tribe or sub order of Saurian Reptiles that were then being recognized in England and around the world 7 8 9 53 54 The term is derived from Ancient Greek deinos deinos terrible potent or fearfully great and saῦros sauros lizard or reptile 53 55 Though the taxonomic name has often been interpreted as a reference to dinosaurs teeth claws and other fearsome characteristics Owen intended it also to evoke their size and majesty 56 Owen recognized that the remains that had been found so far Iguanodon Megalosaurus and Hylaeosaurus shared distinctive features and so decided to present them as a distinct taxonomic group As clarified by British geologist and historian Hugh Torrens Owen had given a presentation about fossil reptiles to the British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1841 but reports of the time show that Owen did not mention the word dinosaur nor recognize dinosaurs as a distinct group of reptiles in his address He introduced the Dinosauria only in the revised text version of his talk published in April 1842 7 8 With the backing of Prince Albert the husband of Queen Victoria Owen established the Natural History Museum London to display the national collection of dinosaur fossils and other biological and geological exhibits 57 Discoveries in North America nbsp Edward Drinker Cope nbsp Othniel Charles Marsh In 1858 William Parker Foulke discovered the first known American dinosaur in marl pits in the small town of Haddonfield New Jersey Although fossils had been found before their nature had not been correctly discerned The creature was named Hadrosaurus foulkii It was an extremely important find Hadrosaurus was one of the first nearly complete dinosaur skeletons found the first was in 1834 in Maidstone England and it was clearly a bipedal creature This was a revolutionary discovery as until that point most scientists had believed dinosaurs walked on four feet like other lizards Foulke s discoveries sparked a wave of interests in dinosaurs in the United States known as dinosaur mania 58 Dinosaur mania was exemplified by the fierce rivalry between Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh both of whom raced to be the first to find new dinosaurs in what came to be known as the Bone Wars This fight between the two scientists lasted for over 30 years ending in 1897 when Cope died after spending his entire fortune on the dinosaur hunt Many valuable dinosaur specimens were damaged or destroyed due to the pair s rough methods for example their diggers often used dynamite to unearth bones Modern paleontologists would find such methods crude and unacceptable since blasting easily destroys fossil and stratigraphic evidence Despite their unrefined methods the contributions of Cope and Marsh to paleontology were vast Marsh unearthed 86 new species of dinosaur and Cope discovered 56 a total of 142 new species Cope s collection is now at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City while Marsh s is at the Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale University 59 Dinosaur renaissance and beyond Main article Dinosaur renaissance nbsp John Ostrom s original restoration of Deinonychus published in 1969World War II caused a pause in palaeontological research after the war research attention was also diverted increasingly to fossil mammals rather than dinosaurs which were seen as sluggish and cold blooded 60 61 At the end of the 1960s however the field of dinosaur research experienced a surge in activity that remains ongoing 62 Several seminal studies led to this activity First John Ostrom discovered the bird like dromaeosaurid theropod Deinonychus and described it in 1969 Its anatomy indicated that it was an active predator that was likely warm blooded in marked contrast to the then prevailing image of dinosaurs 60 Concurrently Robert T Bakker published a series of studies that likewise argued for active lifestyles in dinosaurs based on anatomical and ecological evidence see Physiology 63 64 which were subsequently summarized in his 1986 book The Dinosaur Heresies 65 nbsp Paleontologist Robert T Bakker with a mounted skeleton of a tyrannosaurid Gorgosaurus libratus New revelations were supported by an increase in dinosaur discoveries Major new dinosaur discoveries have been made by paleontologists working in previously unexplored regions including India South America Madagascar Antarctica and most significantly China Across theropods sauropodomorphs and ornithischians the number of named genera began to increase exponentially in the 1990s 21 As of 2008 update over 30 new species of dinosaurs were named each year 66 At least sauropodomorphs experienced a further increase in the number of named species in the 2010s with an average of 9 3 new species having been named each year between 2009 and 2020 As a consequence more sauropodomorphs were named between 1990 and 2020 than in all previous years combined 67 These new localities also led to improvements in overall specimen quality with new species being increasingly named not on scrappy fossils but on more complete skeletons sometimes from multiple individuals Better specimens also led to new species being invalidated less frequently 66 Asian localities have produced the most complete theropod specimens 68 while North American localities have produced the most complete sauropodomorph specimens 67 Prior to the dinosaur renaissance dinosaurs were mostly classified using the traditional rank based system of Linnaean taxonomy The renaissance was also accompanied by the increasingly widespread application of cladistics a more objective method of classification based on ancestry and shared traits which has proved tremendously useful in the study of dinosaur systematics and evolution Cladistic analysis among other techniques helps to compensate for an often incomplete and fragmentary fossil record 69 70 Reference books summarizing the state of dinosaur research such as David B Weishampel and colleagues The Dinosauria made knowledge more accessible 71 and spurred further interest in dinosaur research The release of the first and second editions of The Dinosauria in 1990 and 2004 and of a review paper by Paul Sereno in 1998 were accompanied by increases in the number of published phylogenetic trees for dinosaurs 72 Soft tissue and molecular preservation nbsp An Edmontosaurus specimen s skin impressions found in 1999Dinosaur fossils are not limited to bones but also include imprints or mineralized remains of skin coverings organs and other tissues Of these skin coverings based on keratin proteins are most easily preserved because of their cross linked hydrophobic molecular structure 73 Fossils of keratin based skin coverings or bony skin coverings are known from most major groups of dinosaurs Dinosaur fossils with scaly skin impressions have been found since the 19th century Samuel Beckles discovered a sauropod forelimb with preserved skin in 1852 that was incorrectly attributed to a crocodile it was correctly attributed by Marsh in 1888 and subject to further study by Reginald Hooley in 1917 74 Among ornithischians in 1884 Jacob Wortman found skin impressions on the first known specimen of Edmontosaurus annectens which were largely destroyed during the specimen s excavation 75 Owen and Hooley subsequently described skin impressions of Hypsilophodon and Iguanodon in 1885 and 1917 74 Since then scale impressions have been most frequently found among hadrosaurids where the impressions are known from nearly the entire body across multiple specimens 76 nbsp Colour restoration of Sinosauropteryx nbsp Colour restoration of Psittacosaurus Starting from the 1990s major discoveries of exceptionally preserved fossils in deposits known as conservation Lagerstatten contributed to research on dinosaur soft tissues 77 78 Chiefly among these were the rocks that produced the Jehol Early Cretaceous and Yanliao Mid to Late Jurassic biotas of northeastern China from which hundreds of dinosaur specimens bearing impressions of feather like structures both closely related to birds and otherwise see Origin of birds have been described by Xing Xu and colleagues 79 80 In living reptiles and mammals pigment storing cellular structures known as melanosomes are partially responsible for producing colouration 81 82 Both chemical traces of melanin and characteristically shaped melanosomes have been reported from feathers and scales of Jehol and Yanliao dinosaurs including both theropods and ornithischians 83 This has enabled multiple full body reconstructions of dinosaur colouration such as for Sinosauropteryx 84 and Psittacosaurus 85 by Jakob Vinther and colleagues and similar techniques have also been extended to dinosaur fossils from other localities 81 However some researchers have also suggested that fossilized melanosomes represent bacterial remains 86 87 Stomach contents in some Jehol and Yanliao dinosaurs closely related to birds have also provided indirect indications of diet and digestive system anatomy e g crops 88 89 More concrete evidence of internal anatomy has been reported in Scipionyx from the Pietraroja Plattenkalk of Italy It preserves portions of the intestines colon liver muscles and windpipe 90 nbsp Scipionyx fossil with intestines Natural History Museum of MilanConcurrently a line of work led by Mary Higby Schweitzer Jack Horner and colleagues reported various occurrences of preserved soft tissues and proteins within dinosaur bone fossils Various mineralized structures that likely represented red blood cells and collagen fibres had been found by Schweitzer and others in tyrannosaurid bones as early as 1991 91 92 93 However in 2005 Schweitzer and colleagues reported that a femur of Tyrannosaurus preserved soft flexible tissue within including blood vessels bone matrix and connective tissue bone fibers that had retained their microscopic structure 94 This discovery suggested that original soft tissues could be preserved over geological time 73 with multiple mechanisms having been proposed 95 Later in 2009 Schweitzer and colleagues reported that a Brachylophosaurus femur preserved similar microstructures and immunohistochemical techniques based on antibody binding demonstrated the presence of proteins such as collagen elastin and laminin 96 Both specimens yielded collagen protein sequences that were viable for molecular phylogenetic analyses which grouped them with birds as would be expected 96 97 The extraction of fragmentary DNA has also been reported for both of these fossils 98 along with a specimen of Hypacrosaurus 99 In 2015 Sergio Bertazzo and colleagues reported the preservation of collagen fibres and red blood cells in eight Cretaceous dinosaur specimens that did not show any signs of exceptional preservation indicating that soft tissue may be preserved more commonly than previously thought 100 Suggestions that these structures represent bacterial biofilms 101 have been rejected 102 but cross contamination remains a possibility that is difficult to detect 103 Evolutionary historyOrigins and early evolution nbsp The early dinosaurs Herrerasaurus large Eoraptor small and a Plateosaurus skull from the TriassicDinosaurs diverged from their archosaur ancestors during the Middle to Late Triassic epochs roughly 20 million years after the devastating Permian Triassic extinction event wiped out an estimated 96 of all marine species and 70 of terrestrial vertebrate species approximately 252 million years ago 104 105 The oldest dinosaur fossils known from substantial remains date to the Carnian epoch of the Triassic period and have been found primarily in the Ischigualasto and Santa Maria Formations of Argentina and Brazil and the Pebbly Arkose Formation of Zimbabwe 106 The Ischigualasto Formation radiometrically dated at 231 230 million years old 107 has produced the early saurischian Eoraptor originally considered a member of the Herrerasauridae 108 but now considered to be an early sauropodomorph along with the herrerasaurids Herrerasaurus and Sanjuansaurus and the sauropodomorphs Chromogisaurus Eodromaeus and Panphagia 109 Eoraptor s likely resemblance to the common ancestor of all dinosaurs suggests that the first dinosaurs would have been small bipedal predators 110 111 112 The Santa Maria Formation radiometrically dated to be older at 233 23 million years old 113 has produced the herrerasaurids Gnathovorax and Staurikosaurus along with the sauropodomorphs Bagualosaurus Buriolestes Guaibasaurus Macrocollum Nhandumirim Pampadromaeus Saturnalia and Unaysaurus 109 The Pebbly Arkose Formation which is of uncertain age but was likely comparable to the other two has produced the sauropodomorph Mbiresaurus along with an unnamed herrerasaurid 106 Less well preserved remains of the sauropodomorphs Jaklapallisaurus and Nambalia along with the early saurischian Alwalkeria are known from the Upper Maleri and Lower Maleri Formations of India 114 The Carnian aged Chanares Formation of Argentina preserves primitive dinosaur like ornithodirans such as Lagosuchus and Lagerpeton in Argentina making it another important site for understanding dinosaur evolution These ornithodirans support the model of early dinosaurs as small bipedal predators 109 115 Dinosaurs may have appeared as early as the Anisian epoch of the Triassic approximately 243 million years ago which is the age of Nyasasaurus from the Manda Formation of Tanzania However its known fossils are too fragmentary to identify it as a dinosaur or only a close relative 116 The referral of the Manda Formation to the Anisian is also uncertain Regardless dinosaurs existed alongside non dinosaurian ornithodirans for a period of time with estimates ranging from 5 10 million years 117 to 21 million years 113 When dinosaurs appeared they were not the dominant terrestrial animals The terrestrial habitats were occupied by various types of archosauromorphs and therapsids like cynodonts and rhynchosaurs Their main competitors were the pseudosuchians such as aetosaurs ornithosuchids and rauisuchians which were more successful than the dinosaurs 118 Most of these other animals became extinct in the Triassic in one of two events First at about 215 million years ago a variety of basal archosauromorphs including the protorosaurs became extinct This was followed by the Triassic Jurassic extinction event about 201 million years ago that saw the end of most of the other groups of early archosaurs like aetosaurs ornithosuchids phytosaurs and rauisuchians Rhynchosaurs and dicynodonts survived at least in some areas at least as late as early mid Norian and late Norian or earliest Rhaetian stages respectively 119 120 and the exact date of their extinction is uncertain These losses left behind a land fauna of crocodylomorphs dinosaurs mammals pterosaurians and turtles 10 The first few lines of early dinosaurs diversified through the Carnian and Norian stages of the Triassic possibly by occupying the niches of the groups that became extinct 12 Also notably there was a heightened rate of extinction during the Carnian pluvial event 121 Evolution and paleobiogeography nbsp The supercontinent Pangaea in the early Mesozoic around 200 million years ago Dinosaur evolution after the Triassic followed changes in vegetation and the location of continents In the Late Triassic and Early Jurassic the continents were connected as the single landmass Pangaea and there was a worldwide dinosaur fauna mostly composed of coelophysoid carnivores and early sauropodomorph herbivores 122 Gymnosperm plants particularly conifers a potential food source radiated in the Late Triassic Early sauropodomorphs did not have sophisticated mechanisms for processing food in the mouth and so must have employed other means of breaking down food farther along the digestive tract 123 The general homogeneity of dinosaurian faunas continued into the Middle and Late Jurassic where most localities had predators consisting of ceratosaurians megalosauroids and allosauroids and herbivores consisting of stegosaurian ornithischians and large sauropods Examples of this include the Morrison Formation of North America and Tendaguru Beds of Tanzania Dinosaurs in China show some differences with specialized metriacanthosaurid theropods and unusual long necked sauropods like Mamenchisaurus 122 Ankylosaurians and ornithopods were also becoming more common but primitive sauropodomorphs had become extinct Conifers and pteridophytes were the most common plants Sauropods like earlier sauropodomorphs were not oral processors but ornithischians were evolving various means of dealing with food in the mouth including potential cheek like organs to keep food in the mouth and jaw motions to grind food 123 Another notable evolutionary event of the Jurassic was the appearance of true birds descended from maniraptoran coelurosaurians 14 By the Early Cretaceous and the ongoing breakup of Pangaea dinosaurs were becoming strongly differentiated by landmass The earliest part of this time saw the spread of ankylosaurians iguanodontians and brachiosaurids through Europe North America and northern Africa These were later supplemented or replaced in Africa by large spinosaurid and carcharodontosaurid theropods and rebbachisaurid and titanosaurian sauropods also found in South America In Asia maniraptoran coelurosaurians like dromaeosaurids troodontids and oviraptorosaurians became the common theropods and ankylosaurids and early ceratopsians like Psittacosaurus became important herbivores Meanwhile Australia was home to a fauna of basal ankylosaurians hypsilophodonts and iguanodontians 122 The stegosaurians appear to have gone extinct at some point in the late Early Cretaceous or early Late Cretaceous A major change in the Early Cretaceous which would be amplified in the Late Cretaceous was the evolution of flowering plants At the same time several groups of dinosaurian herbivores evolved more sophisticated ways to orally process food Ceratopsians developed a method of slicing with teeth stacked on each other in batteries and iguanodontians refined a method of grinding with dental batteries taken to its extreme in hadrosaurids 123 Some sauropods also evolved tooth batteries best exemplified by the rebbachisaurid Nigersaurus 124 There were three general dinosaur faunas in the Late Cretaceous In the northern continents of North America and Asia the major theropods were tyrannosaurids and various types of smaller maniraptoran theropods with a predominantly ornithischian herbivore assemblage of hadrosaurids ceratopsians ankylosaurids and pachycephalosaurians In the southern continents that had made up the now splitting supercontinent Gondwana abelisaurids were the common theropods and titanosaurian sauropods the common herbivores Finally in Europe dromaeosaurids rhabdodontid iguanodontians nodosaurid ankylosaurians and titanosaurian sauropods were prevalent 122 Flowering plants were greatly radiating 123 with the first grasses appearing by the end of the Cretaceous 125 Grinding hadrosaurids and shearing ceratopsians became very diverse across North America and Asia Theropods were also radiating as herbivores or omnivores with therizinosaurians and ornithomimosaurians becoming common 123 The Cretaceous Paleogene extinction event which occurred approximately 66 million years ago at the end of the Cretaceous caused the extinction of all dinosaur groups except for the neornithine birds Some other diapsid groups including crocodilians dyrosaurs sebecosuchians turtles lizards snakes sphenodontians and choristoderans also survived the event 126 The surviving lineages of neornithine birds including the ancestors of modern ratites ducks and chickens and a variety of waterbirds diversified rapidly at the beginning of the Paleogene period entering ecological niches left vacant by the extinction of Mesozoic dinosaur groups such as the arboreal enantiornithines aquatic hesperornithines and even the larger terrestrial theropods in the form of Gastornis eogruiids bathornithids ratites geranoidids mihirungs and terror birds It is often stated that mammals out competed the neornithines for dominance of most terrestrial niches but many of these groups co existed with rich mammalian faunas for most of the Cenozoic Era 127 Terror birds and bathornithids occupied carnivorous guilds alongside predatory mammals 128 129 and ratites are still fairly successful as mid sized herbivores eogruiids similarly lasted from the Eocene to Pliocene becoming extinct only very recently after over 20 million years of co existence with many mammal groups 130 ClassificationMain article Dinosaur classification nbsp Saurischian pelvis structure left side nbsp Tyrannosaurus pelvis showing saurischian structure left side nbsp Ornithischian pelvis structure left side nbsp Edmontosaurus pelvis showing ornithischian structure left side Dinosaurs belong to a group known as archosaurs which also includes modern crocodilians Within the archosaur group dinosaurs are differentiated most noticeably by their gait Dinosaur legs extend directly beneath the body whereas the legs of lizards and crocodilians sprawl out to either side 30 Collectively dinosaurs as a clade are divided into two primary branches Saurischia and Ornithischia Saurischia includes those taxa sharing a more recent common ancestor with birds than with Ornithischia while Ornithischia includes all taxa sharing a more recent common ancestor with Triceratops than with Saurischia Anatomically these two groups can be distinguished most noticeably by their pelvic structure Early saurischians lizard hipped from the Greek sauros saῦros meaning lizard and ischion ἰsxion meaning hip joint retained the hip structure of their ancestors with a pubis bone directed cranially or forward 37 This basic form was modified by rotating the pubis backward to varying degrees in several groups Herrerasaurus 131 therizinosauroids 132 dromaeosaurids 133 and birds 14 Saurischia includes the theropods exclusively bipedal and with a wide variety of diets and sauropodomorphs long necked herbivores which include advanced quadrupedal groups 29 134 By contrast ornithischians bird hipped from the Greek ornitheios ὀrni8eios meaning of a bird and ischion ἰsxion meaning hip joint had a pelvis that superficially resembled a bird s pelvis the pubic bone was oriented caudally rear pointing Unlike birds the ornithischian pubis also usually had an additional forward pointing process Ornithischia includes a variety of species that were primarily herbivores Despite the terms bird hip Ornithischia and lizard hip Saurischia birds are not part of Ornithischia Birds instead belong to Saurischia the lizard hipped dinosaurs birds evolved from earlier dinosaurs with lizard hips 30 Taxonomy The following is a simplified classification of dinosaur groups based on their evolutionary relationships and those of the main dinosaur groups Theropoda Sauropodomorpha and Ornithischia compiled by Justin Tweet 135 Further details and other hypotheses of classification may be found on individual articles Dinosauria nbsp Restoration of six ornithopods far left Camptosaurus left Iguanodon center background Shantungosaurus center foreground Dryosaurus right Corythosaurus far right large Tenontosaurus Ornithischia bird hipped diverse bipedal and quadrupedal herbivores Heterodontosauridae small herbivores omnivores with prominent canine like teeth Genasauria cheeked lizards Thyreophora armored dinosaurs bipeds and quadrupeds Eurypoda heavy quadrupedal thyreophorans Stegosauria spikes and plates as primary armor Huayangosauridae small stegosaurs with flank osteoderms and tail clubs Stegosauridae large stegosaurs Ankylosauria scutes as primary armor Parankylosauria small southern ankylosaurs with macuahuitl like tails Nodosauridae mostly spiky club less ankylosaurs Ankylosauridae characterized by flat scutes Ankylosaurinae club tailed ankylosaurids dd dd dd Neornithischia new ornithischians Cerapoda horned feet Marginocephalia characterized by a cranial growth dd dd dd dd dd nbsp Restoration of four ceratopsids top left Triceratops top right Styracosaurus bottom left Anchiceratops bottom right Chasmosaurus Pachycephalosauria bipeds with domed or knobby growth on skulls Ceratopsia bipeds and quadrupeds many had neck frills and horns Chaoyangsauridae small frill less basal ceratopsians Neoceratopsia new ceratopsians Leptoceratopsidae little to no frills hornless with robust jaws Protoceratopsidae basal ceratopsians with small frills and stubby horns Ceratopsoidea large horned ceratopsians Ceratopsidae large elaborately ornamented ceratopsians Chasmosaurinae ceratopsids with enlarged brow horns Centrosaurinae ceratopsids mostly characterized by frill and nasal ornamentation Nasutoceratopsini centrosaurines with enlarged nasal cavities Centrosaurini centrosaurines with enlarged nasal horns Pachyrhinosaurini mostly had nasal bosses instead of horns dd dd dd dd dd dd Ornithopoda various sizes bipeds and quadrupeds evolved a method of chewing using skull flexibility and numerous teeth Jeholosauridae small Asian neornithischians Thescelosauridae wondrous lizards Orodrominae burrowers Thescelosaurinae large thescelosaurids Iguanodontia iguana teeth advanced ornithopods Elasmaria mostly southern ornithopods with mineralized plates along the ribs may be thescelosaurids Rhabdodontomorpha with distinctive dentition Rhabdodontidae European rhabdodontomorphs Dryosauridae mid sized small headed Ankylopollexia early members mid sized stocky Styracosterna spiked sterna Hadrosauriformes ancestrally had a thumb spike large quadrupedal herbivores with teeth merged into dental batteries Hadrosauromorpha hadrosaurids and their closest relatives Hadrosauridae duck billed dinosaurs often with crests Saurolophinae hadrosaurids with solid small no crests Brachylophosaurini short crested Kritosaurini enlarged solid nasal crests Saurolophini small spike like crests Edmontosaurini flat headed saurolophines Lambeosaurinae hadrosaurids often with hollow crests Aralosaurini solid crested Tsintaosaurini vertical tube like crests Parasaurolophini long backwards arcing crests Lambeosaurini usually rounded crests dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd Saurischia Herrerasauridae early bipedal carnivores dd nbsp Restoration of four macronarian sauropods from left to right Camarasaurus Brachiosaurus Giraffatitan and Euhelopus Sauropodomorpha herbivores with small heads long necks and long tails Unaysauridae primitive strictly bipedal prosauropods Plateosauria diverse bipeds and quadrupeds Massospondylidae long necked primitive sauropodomorphs Riojasauridae large primitive sauropodomorphs Sauropodiformes heavy bipeds and quadrupeds Sauropoda very large and heavy quadrupedal Lessemsauridae gigantic yet lacking several weight saving adaptations Gravisauria heavy lizards Eusauropoda true sauropods Turiasauria often large widespread sauropods Neosauropoda new sauropods columnar limbs Diplodocoidea skulls and tails elongated teeth typically narrow and pencil like Rebbachisauridae short necked low browsing diplodocoids often with high backs Flagellicaudata whip tailed Dicraeosauridae small short necked diplodocoids with enlarged cervical and dorsal vertebrae Diplodocidae extremely long necked Apatosaurinae robust cervical vertebrae Diplodocinae long thin necks dd dd Macronaria boxy skulls spoon or pencil shaped teeth Titanosauriformes titan lizard forms Brachiosauridae long necked long armed macronarians Somphospondyli porous vertebrae Euhelopodidae stocky mostly Asian Titanosauria diverse stocky with wide hips most common in the Late Cretaceous of southern continents dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd Theropoda carnivorous Neotheropoda new theropods Coelophysoidea early theropods includes Coelophysis and close relatives Dilophosaur grade neotheropods larger kink snouted dinosaurs Averostra bird snouts Ceratosauria generally elaborately horned carnivores that existed from the Jurassic to Cretaceous periods originally included Coelophysoidea Ceratosauridae ceratosaurs with large teeth Abelisauroidea ceratosaurs exemplified by reduced arms and hands Abelisauridae large abelisauroids with short arms and oftentimes elaborate facial ornamentation Noasauridae diverse generally light theropods may include several obscure taxa Elaphrosaurinae bird like omnivorous as juveniles but herbivorous as adults Noasaurinae small carnivores dd dd Tetanurae stiff tailed dinosaurs Megalosauroidea early group of large carnivores Piatnitzkysauridae small basal megalosauroids endemic to the Americas Megalosauridae large megalosauroids with powerful arms and hands Spinosauridae crocodile like semiaquatic carnivores Avetheropoda bird theropods Megaraptora theropods with large hand claws either carnosaurs or coelurosaurs potentially tyrannosauroids Carnosauria large meat eating dinosaurs megalosauroids sometimes included Metriacanthosauridae primitive Asian allosauroids Allosauridae Allosaurus and its very closest relatives Carcharodontosauria robust allosauroids Carcharodontosauridae includes some of the largest purely terrestrial carnivores Neovenatoridae new hunters may include megaraptorans dd Coelurosauria feathered theropods with a range of body sizes and niches Nexus of basal coelurosaurs used by Tweet to denote well known taxa with unstable positions at the base of Coelurosauria Tyrannoraptora tyrant thieves Compsognathidae small early coelurosaurs with short forelimbs Tyrannosauroidea mostly large primitive coelurosaurs Proceratosauridae tyrannosauroids with head crests Tyrannosauridae Tyrannosaurus and close relatives Maniraptoriformes bird like dinosaurs Ornithomimosauria small headed mostly toothless omnivorous or possible herbivores Ornithomimidae very ostrich like dinosaurs Maniraptora dinosaurs with pennaceous feathers dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd nbsp Restoration of six dromaeosaurid theropods from left to right Microraptor Velociraptor Austroraptor Dromaeosaurus Utahraptor and Deinonychus Alvarezsauroidea small hunters with reduced forelimbs Alvarezsauridae insectivores with only one enlarged digit Therizinosauria tall long necked theropods omnivores and herbivores Therizinosauroidea larger therizinosaurs Therizinosauridae sloth like herbivores often with enlarged claws dd Oviraptorosauria omnivorous beaked dinosaurs Caudipteridae bird like basal oviraptorosaurs Caenagnathoidea cassowary like oviraptorosaurs Caenagnathidae toothless oviraptorosaurs known from North America and Asia Oviraptoridae characterized by two bony projections at the back of the mouth exclusive to Asia dd Paraves avialans and their closest relatives Scansoriopterygidae small tree climbing theropods with membranous wings Deinonychosauria toe clawed dinosaurs may not form a natural group Archaeopterygidae small winged theropods or primitive birds Troodontidae omnivores enlarged brain cavities Dromaeosauridae raptors Microraptoria characterized by large wings on both the arms and legs may have been capable of powered flight Eudromaeosauria hunters with greatly enlarged sickle claws Unenlagiidae piscivores may be dromaeosaurids Halszkaraptorinae duck like potentially semiaquatic Unenlagiinae long snouted dd Avialae modern birds and extinct relatives dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd Timeline of major groups Timeline of major dinosaur groups per Holtz 2007 PaleobiologyKnowledge about dinosaurs is derived from a variety of fossil and non fossil records including fossilized bones feces trackways gastroliths feathers impressions of skin internal organs and other soft tissues 90 94 Many fields of study contribute to our understanding of dinosaurs including physics especially biomechanics chemistry biology and the Earth sciences of which paleontology is a sub discipline 136 137 Two topics of particular interest and study have been dinosaur size and behavior 138 Size Main article Dinosaur size nbsp Scale diagram comparing the average human to the longest known dinosaurs in five major clades Sauropoda Supersaurus vivianae Ornithopoda Shantungosaurus giganteus Theropoda Spinosaurus aegyptiacus Thyreophora Stegosaurus ungulatus Marginocephalia Triceratops prorsus Current evidence suggests that dinosaur average size varied through the Triassic Early Jurassic Late Jurassic and Cretaceous 111 Predatory theropod dinosaurs which occupied most terrestrial carnivore niches during the Mesozoic most often fall into the 100 to 1000 kg 220 to 2200 lb category when sorted by estimated weight into categories based on order of magnitude whereas recent predatory carnivoran mammals peak in the 10 to 100 kg 22 to 220 lb category 139 The mode of Mesozoic dinosaur body masses is between 1 and 10 metric tons 1 1 and 11 0 short tons 140 This contrasts sharply with the average size of Cenozoic mammals estimated by the National Museum of Natural History as about 2 to 5 kg 4 4 to 11 0 lb 141 The sauropods were the largest and heaviest dinosaurs For much of the dinosaur era the smallest sauropods were larger than anything else in their habitat and the largest was an order of magnitude more massive than anything else that has since walked the Earth Giant prehistoric mammals such as Paraceratherium the largest land mammal ever were dwarfed by the giant sauropods and only modern whales approach or surpass them in size 142 There are several proposed advantages for the large size of sauropods including protection from predation reduction of energy use and longevity but it may be that the most important advantage was dietary Large animals are more efficient at digestion than small animals because food spends more time in their digestive systems This also permits them to subsist on food with lower nutritive value than smaller animals Sauropod remains are mostly found in rock formations interpreted as dry or seasonally dry and the ability to eat large quantities of low nutrient browse would have been advantageous in such environments 143 Largest and smallest Scientists will probably never be certain of the largest and smallest dinosaurs to have ever existed This is because only a tiny percentage of animals were ever fossilized and most of these remain buried in the earth Few of the specimens that are recovered are complete skeletons and impressions of skin and other soft tissues are rare Rebuilding a complete skeleton by comparing the size and morphology of bones to those of similar better known species is an inexact art and reconstructing the muscles and other organs of the living animal is at best a process of educated guesswork 144 nbsp Comparative size of Argentinosaurus to the average humanThe tallest and heaviest dinosaur known from good skeletons is Giraffatitan brancai previously classified as a species of Brachiosaurus Its remains were discovered in Tanzania between 1907 and 1912 Bones from several similar sized individuals were incorporated into the skeleton now mounted and on display at the Museum fur Naturkunde in Berlin 145 this mount is 12 meters 39 ft tall and 21 8 to 22 5 meters 72 to 74 ft long 146 147 and would have belonged to an animal that weighed between 30000 and 60000 kilograms 70000 and 130000 lb The longest complete dinosaur is the 27 meters 89 ft long Diplodocus which was discovered in Wyoming in the United States and displayed in Pittsburgh s Carnegie Museum of Natural History in 1907 148 The longest dinosaur known from good fossil material is Patagotitan the skeleton mount in the American Museum of Natural History in New York is 37 meters 121 ft long The Museo Municipal Carmen Funes in Plaza Huincul Argentina has an Argentinosaurus reconstructed skeleton mount that is 39 7 meters 130 ft long 149 nbsp Maraapunisaurus one of the largest animals to walk the earth nbsp Bruhathkayosaurus potentially the largest terrestrial animal to ever exist There were larger dinosaurs but knowledge of them is based entirely on a small number of fragmentary fossils Most of the largest herbivorous specimens on record were discovered in the 1970s or later and include the massive Argentinosaurus which may have weighed 80000 to 100000 kilograms 88 to 110 short tons and reached lengths of 30 to 40 meters 98 to 131 ft some of the longest were the 33 5 meter 110 ft long Diplodocus hallorum 143 formerly Seismosaurus the 33 to 34 meter 108 to 112 ft long Supersaurus 150 and 37 meter 121 ft long Patagotitan and the tallest the 18 meter 59 ft tall Sauroposeidon which could have reached a sixth floor window There were a few dinosaurs that was considered either the heaviest and longest The most famous one include Amphicoelias fragillimus known only from a now lost partial vertebral neural arch described in 1878 Extrapolating from the illustration of this bone the animal may have been 58 meters 190 ft long and weighed 122400 kg 269800 lb 143 However recent research have placed Amphicoelias from the long gracile diplodocid to the shorter but much stockier rebbachisaurid Now renamed as Maraapunisaurus this sauropod now stands as much as 40 meters 130 ft long and weigh as much as 120000 kg 260000 lb 151 152 Another contender of this title includes Bruhathkayosaurus matleyi an incredibly controversial taxon that was recently confirmed to exist after archived photos were uncovered 153 Bruhathkayosaurus was a titanosaur and would have most likely weighed more than even Marrapunisaurus Recent size estimates in 2023 have placed this sauropod reaching lengths of up to 44 m 144 ft long and a colossal weight range of around 110000 170000 kg 240000 370000 lb if these upper estimates up true Bruhathkayosaurus would have rivaled the blue whale and Perucetus colossus as one of the largest animals to have ever existed 154 The largest carnivorous dinosaur was Spinosaurus reaching a length of 12 6 to 18 meters 41 to 59 ft and weighing 7 to 20 9 metric tons 7 7 to 23 0 short tons 155 156 Other large carnivorous theropods included Giganotosaurus Carcharodontosaurus and Tyrannosaurus 156 Therizinosaurus and Deinocheirus were among the tallest of the theropods The largest ornithischian dinosaur was probably the hadrosaurid Shantungosaurus giganteus which measured 16 6 meters 54 ft 157 The largest individuals may have weighed as much as 16 metric tons 18 short tons 158 nbsp An adult bee hummingbird the smallest known dinosaurThe smallest dinosaur known is the bee hummingbird 159 with a length of only 5 centimeters 2 0 in and mass of around 1 8 g 0 063 oz 160 The smallest known non avialan dinosaurs were about the size of pigeons and were those theropods most closely related to birds 161 For example Anchiornis huxleyi is currently the smallest non avialan dinosaur described from an adult specimen with an estimated weight of 110 g 3 9 oz 162 and a total skeletal length of 34 centimeters 1 12 ft 161 162 The smallest herbivorous non avialan dinosaurs included Microceratus and Wannanosaurus at about 60 centimeters 2 0 ft long each 163 164 Behavior nbsp A nesting ground of the hadrosaur Maiasaura peeblesorum was discovered in 1978Many modern birds are highly social often found living in flocks There is general agreement that some behaviors that are common in birds as well as in crocodiles closest living relatives of birds were also common among extinct dinosaur groups Interpretations of behavior in fossil species are generally based on the pose of skeletons and their habitat computer simulations of their biomechanics and comparisons with modern animals in similar ecological niches 136 The first potential evidence for herding or flocking as a widespread behavior common to many dinosaur groups in addition to birds was the 1878 discovery of 31 Iguanodon ornithischians that were then thought to have perished together in Bernissart Belgium after they fell into a deep flooded sinkhole and drowned 165 Other mass death sites have been discovered subsequently Those along with multiple trackways suggest that gregarious behavior was common in many early dinosaur species Trackways of hundreds or even thousands of herbivores indicate that duck billed hadrosaurids may have moved in great herds like the American bison or the African springbok Sauropod tracks document that these animals traveled in groups composed of several different species at least in Oxfordshire England 166 although there is no evidence for specific herd structures 167 Congregating into herds may have evolved for defense for migratory purposes or to provide protection for young There is evidence that many types of slow growing dinosaurs including various theropods sauropods ankylosaurians ornithopods and ceratopsians formed aggregations of immature individuals One example is a site in Inner Mongolia that has yielded remains of over 20 Sinornithomimus from one to seven years old This assemblage is interpreted as a social group that was trapped in mud 168 The interpretation of dinosaurs as gregarious has also extended to depicting carnivorous theropods as pack hunters working together to bring down large prey 169 170 However this lifestyle is uncommon among modern birds crocodiles and other reptiles and the taphonomic evidence suggesting mammal like pack hunting in such theropods as Deinonychus and Allosaurus can also be interpreted as the results of fatal disputes between feeding animals as is seen in many modern diapsid predators 171 nbsp Restoration of two Centrosaurus apertus engaged in intra specific combatThe crests and frills of some dinosaurs like the marginocephalians theropods and lambeosaurines may have been too fragile to be used for active defense and so they were likely used for sexual or aggressive displays though little is known about dinosaur mating and territorialism Head wounds from bites suggest that theropods at least engaged in active aggressive confrontations 172 From a behavioral standpoint one of the most valuable dinosaur fossils was discovered in the Gobi Desert in 1971 It included a Velociraptor attacking a Protoceratops 173 providing evidence that dinosaurs did indeed attack each other 174 Additional evidence for attacking live prey is the partially healed tail of an Edmontosaurus a hadrosaurid dinosaur the tail is damaged in such a way that shows the animal was bitten by a tyrannosaur but survived 174 Cannibalism amongst some species of dinosaurs was confirmed by tooth marks found in Madagascar in 2003 involving the theropod Majungasaurus 175 Comparisons between the scleral rings of dinosaurs and modern birds and reptiles have been used to infer daily activity patterns of dinosaurs Although it has been suggested that most dinosaurs were active during the day these comparisons have shown that small predatory dinosaurs such as dromaeosaurids Juravenator and Megapnosaurus were likely nocturnal Large and medium sized herbivorous and omnivorous dinosaurs such as ceratopsians sauropodomorphs hadrosaurids ornithomimosaurs may have been cathemeral active during short intervals throughout the day although the small ornithischian Agilisaurus was inferred to be diurnal 176 Based on fossil evidence from dinosaurs such as Oryctodromeus some ornithischian species seem to have led a partially fossorial burrowing lifestyle 177 Many modern birds are arboreal tree climbing and this was also true of many Mesozoic birds especially the enantiornithines 178 While some early bird like species may have already been arboreal as well including dromaeosaurids such as Microraptor 179 most non avialan dinosaurs seem to have relied on land based locomotion A good understanding of how dinosaurs moved on the ground is key to models of dinosaur behavior the science of biomechanics pioneered by Robert McNeill Alexander has provided significant insight in this area For example studies of the forces exerted by muscles and gravity on dinosaurs skeletal structure have investigated how fast dinosaurs could run 136 whether diplodocids could create sonic booms via whip like tail snapping 180 and whether sauropods could float 181 Communication Modern birds are known to communicate using visual and auditory signals and the wide diversity of visual display structures among fossil dinosaur groups such as horns frills crests sails and feathers suggests that visual communication has always been important in dinosaur biology 182 Reconstruction of the plumage color of Anchiornis suggest the importance of color in visual communication in non avian dinosaurs 183 Vocalization in non avian dinosaurs is less certain In birds the larynx plays no role in sound production Instead they vocalize with a novel organ called the syrinx located further down the trachea 184 The earliest remains of a syrinx was found in a specimen of the duck like Vegavis iaai dated 69 66 million years ago and this organ is unlikely to have existed in non avian dinosaurs 185 nbsp Restoration of a striking and unusual visual display in a Lambeosaurus magnicristatus The crest could also have acted as a resonating chamber for soundsPaleontologist Phil Senter has suggested that since non avian dinosaurs did not have a syrinx and their next closest living relatives crocodilians use the larynx they could not vocalize as the common ancestor would have been mute He states that they mostly on visual displays and possibly non vocal acoustic sounds like hissing jaw grinding or clapping splashing and wing beating possible in winged maniraptoran dinosaurs 182 Other researchers have countered that vocalizations also exist in turtles the closest relatives of archosaurs suggesting that the trait is ancestral to their lineage In addition vocal communication in dinosaurs is indicated by the development of advanced hearing in nearly all major groups Hence the syrinx may have supplemented and then replaced the larynx as a vocal organ rather than there being a silent period in bird evolution 186 In 2023 a fossilized larynx was described from a specimen of the ankylosaurid Pinacosaurus The structure was composed of cricoid and arytenoid cartilages similar to those of non avian reptiles However the mobile cricoid arytenoid joint and long arytenoid cartilages would have allowed for air flow control similar to that of birds and thus could have made bird like vocalizations In addition the cartilages were ossified implying that laryngeal ossification is a feature of some non avian dinosaurs 187 A 2016 study concludes that some dinosaurs may have produced closed mouth vocalizations like cooing hooting and booming These occur in both reptiles and birds and involve inflating the esophagus or tracheal pouches Such vocalizations evolved independently in extant archosaurs numerous times following increases in body size 188 The crests of some hadrosaurids and the nasal chambers of ankylosaurids have been suggested to have functioned in acoustic resonance 189 190 Reproductive biology See also Dinosaur egg nbsp Nest of a plover Charadrius All dinosaurs laid amniotic eggs Dinosaur eggs were usually laid in a nest Most species create somewhat elaborate nests which can be cups domes plates beds scrapes mounds or burrows 191 Some species of modern bird have no nests the cliff nesting common guillemot lays its eggs on bare rock and male emperor penguins keep eggs between their body and feet Primitive birds and many non avialan dinosaurs often lay eggs in communal nests with males primarily incubating the eggs While modern birds have only one functional oviduct and lay one egg at a time more primitive birds and dinosaurs had two oviducts like crocodiles Some non avialan dinosaurs such as Troodon exhibited iterative laying where the adult might lay a pair of eggs every one or two days and then ensured simultaneous hatching by delaying brooding until all eggs were laid 192 When laying eggs females grow a special type of bone between the hard outer bone and the marrow of their limbs This medullary bone which is rich in calcium is used to make eggshells A discovery of features in a Tyrannosaurus skeleton provided evidence of medullary bone in extinct dinosaurs and for the first time allowed paleontologists to establish the sex of a fossil dinosaur specimen Further research has found medullary bone in the carnosaur Allosaurus and the ornithopod Tenontosaurus Because the line of dinosaurs that includes Allosaurus and Tyrannosaurus diverged from the line that led to Tenontosaurus very early in the evolution of dinosaurs this suggests that the production of medullary tissue is a general characteristic of all dinosaurs 193 nbsp Fossil interpreted as a nesting oviraptorid Citipati at the American Museum of Natural History Smaller fossil far right showing inside one of the eggs Another widespread trait among modern birds but see below in regards to fossil groups and extant megapodes is parental care for young after hatching Jack Horner s 1978 discovery of a Maiasaura good mother lizard nesting ground in Montana demonstrated that parental care continued long after birth among ornithopods 194 A specimen of the oviraptorid Citipati osmolskae was discovered in a chicken like brooding position in 1993 195 which may indicate that they had begun using an insulating layer of feathers to keep the eggs warm 196 An embryo of the basal sauropodomorph Massospondylus was found without teeth indicating that some parental care was required to feed the young dinosaurs 197 Trackways have also confirmed parental behavior among ornithopods from the Isle of Skye in northwestern Scotland 198 However there is ample evidence of precociality or superprecociality among many dinosaur species particularly theropods For instance non ornithuromorph birds have been abundantly demonstrated to have had slow growth rates megapode like egg burying behavior and the ability to fly soon after birth 199 200 201 202 Both Tyrannosaurus and Troodon had juveniles with clear superprecociality and likely occupying different ecological niches than the adults 192 Superprecociality has been inferred for sauropods 203 Genital structures are unlikely to fossilize as they lack scales that may allow preservation via pigmentation or residual calcium phosphate salts In 2021 the best preserved specimen of a dinosaur s cloacal vent exterior was described for Psittacosaurus demonstrating lateral swellings similar to crocodylian musk glands used in social displays by both sexes and pigmented regions which could also reflect a signalling function However this specimen on its own does not offer enough information to determine whether this dinosaur had sexual signalling functions it only supports the possibility Cloacal visual signalling can occur in either males or females in living birds making it unlikely to be useful to determine sex for extinct dinosaurs 204 Physiology Main article Physiology of dinosaurs Because both modern crocodilians and birds have four chambered hearts albeit modified in crocodilians it is likely that this is a trait shared by all archosaurs including all dinosaurs 205 While all modern birds have high metabolisms and are endothermic warm blooded a vigorous debate has been ongoing since the 1960s regarding how far back in the dinosaur lineage this trait extended Various researchers have supported dinosaurs as being endothermic ectothermic cold blooded or somewhere in between 206 An emerging consensus among researchers is that while different lineages of dinosaurs would have had different metabolisms most of them had higher metabolic rates than other reptiles but lower than living birds and mammals 207 which is termed mesothermy by some 208 Evidence from crocodiles and their extinct relatives suggests that such elevated metabolisms could have developed in the earliest archosaurs which were the common ancestors of dinosaurs and crocodiles 209 210 nbsp This 1897 restoration of Brontosaurus as an aquatic tail dragging animal by Charles R Knight typified early views on dinosaur lifestyles After non avian dinosaurs were discovered paleontologists first posited that they were ectothermic This was used to imply that the ancient dinosaurs were relatively slow sluggish organisms even though many modern reptiles are fast and light footed despite relying on external sources of heat to regulate their body temperature The idea of dinosaurs as ectothermic remained a prevalent view until Robert T Bakker an early proponent of dinosaur endothermy published an influential paper on the topic in 1968 Bakker specifically used anatomical and ecological evidence to argue that sauropods which had hitherto been depicted as sprawling aquatic animals with their tails dragging on the ground were endotherms that lived vigorous terrestrial lives In 1972 Bakker expanded on his arguments based on energy requirements and predator prey ratios This was one of the seminal results that led to the dinosaur renaissance 63 64 60 211 One of the greatest contributions to the modern understanding of dinosaur physiology has been paleohistology the study of microscopic tissue structure in dinosaurs 212 213 From the 1960s forward Armand de Ricqles suggested that the presence of fibrolamellar bone bony tissue with an irregular fibrous texture and filled with blood vessels was indicative of consistently fast growth and therefore endothermy Fibrolamellar bone was common in both dinosaurs and pterosaurs 214 215 though not universally present 216 217 This has led to a significant body of work in reconstructing growth curves and modeling the evolution of growth rates across various dinosaur lineages 218 which has suggested overall that dinosaurs grew faster than living reptiles 213 Other lines of evidence suggesting endothermy include the presence of feathers and other types of body coverings in many lineages see Feathers more consistent ratios of the isotope oxygen 18 in bony tissue compared to ectotherms particularly as latitude and thus air temperature varied which suggests stable internal temperatures 219 220 although these ratios can be altered during fossilization 221 and the discovery of polar dinosaurs which lived in Australia Antarctica and Alaska when these places would have had cool temperate climates 222 223 224 225 nbsp Comparison between the air sacs of an abelisaur and a birdIn saurischian dinosaurs higher metabolisms were supported by the evolution of the avian respiratory system characterized by an extensive system of air sacs that extended the lungs and invaded many of the bones in the skeleton making them hollow 226 Such respiratory systems which may have appeared in the earliest saurischians 227 would have provided them with more oxygen compared to a mammal of similar size while also having a larger resting tidal volume and requiring a lower breathing frequency which would have allowed them to sustain higher activity levels 142 The rapid airflow would also have been an effective cooling mechanism which in conjunction with a lower metabolic rate 228 would have prevented large sauropods from overheating These traits may have enabled sauropods to grow quickly to gigantic sizes 229 230 Sauropods may also have benefitted from their size their small surface area to volume ratio meant that they would have been able to thermoregulate more easily a phenomenon termed gigantothermy 142 231 Like other reptiles dinosaurs are primarily uricotelic that is their kidneys extract nitrogenous wastes from their bloodstream and excrete it as uric acid instead of urea or ammonia via the ureters into the intestine This would have helped them to conserve water 207 In most living species uric acid is excreted along with feces as a semisolid waste 232 233 However at least some modern birds such as hummingbirds can be facultatively ammonotelic excreting most of the nitrogenous wastes as ammonia 234 This material as well as the output of the intestines emerges from the cloaca 235 236 In addition many species regurgitate pellets 237 and fossil pellets are known as early as the Jurassic from Anchiornis 238 The size and shape of the brain can be partly reconstructed based on the surrounding bones In 1896 Marsh calculated ratios between brain weight and body weight of seven species of dinosaurs showing that the brain of dinosaurs was proportionally smaller than in today s crocodiles and that the brain of Stegosaurus was smaller than in any living land vertebrate This contributed to the widespread public notion of dinosaurs as being sluggish and extraordinarily stupid Harry Jerison in 1973 showed that proportionally smaller brains are expected at larger body sizes and that brain size in dinosaurs was not smaller than expected when compared to living reptiles 239 Later research showed that relative brain size progressively increased during the evolution of theropods with the highest intelligence comparable to that of modern birds calculated for the troodontid Troodon 240 Origin of birdsMain article Origin of birds The possibility that dinosaurs were the ancestors of birds was first suggested in 1868 by Thomas Henry Huxley 241 After the work of Gerhard Heilmann in the early 20th century the theory of birds as dinosaur descendants was abandoned in favor of the idea of them being descendants of generalized thecodonts with the key piece of evidence being the supposed lack of clavicles in dinosaurs 242 However as later discoveries showed clavicles or a single fused wishbone which derived from separate clavicles were not actually absent 14 they had been found as early as 1924 in Oviraptor but misidentified as an interclavicle 243 In the 1970s Ostrom revived the dinosaur bird theory 244 which gained momentum in the coming decades with the advent of cladistic analysis 245 and a great increase in the discovery of small theropods and early birds 32 Of particular note have been the fossils of the Jehol Biota where a variety of theropods and early birds have been found often with feathers of some type 70 14 Birds share over a hundred distinct anatomical features with theropod dinosaurs which are now generally accepted to have been their closest ancient relatives 246 They are most closely allied with maniraptoran coelurosaurs 14 A minority of scientists most notably Alan Feduccia and Larry Martin have proposed other evolutionary paths including revised versions of Heilmann s basal archosaur proposal 247 or that maniraptoran theropods are the ancestors of birds but themselves are not dinosaurs only convergent with dinosaurs 248 Feathers Main article Feathered dinosaurs nbsp Various feathered non avian dinosaurs including Archaeopteryx Anchiornis Microraptor and ZhenyuanlongFeathers are one of the most recognizable characteristics of modern birds and a trait that was also shared by several non avian dinosaurs Based on the current distribution of fossil evidence it appears that feathers were an ancestral dinosaurian trait though one that may have been selectively lost in some species 249 Direct fossil evidence of feathers or feather like structures has been discovered in a diverse array of species in many non avian dinosaur groups 70 both among saurischians and ornithischians Simple branched feather like structures are known from heterodontosaurids primitive neornithischians 250 and theropods 251 and primitive ceratopsians Evidence for true vaned feathers similar to the flight feathers of modern birds has been found only in the theropod subgroup Maniraptora which includes oviraptorosaurs troodontids dromaeosaurids and birds 14 252 Feather like structures known as pycnofibres have also been found in pterosaurs 253 However researchers do not agree regarding whether these structures share a common origin between lineages i e they are homologous 254 255 or if they were the result of widespread experimentation with skin coverings among ornithodirans 256 If the former is the case filaments may have been common in the ornithodiran lineage and evolved before the appearance of dinosaurs themselves 249 Research into the genetics of American alligators has revealed that crocodylian scutes do possess feather keratins during embryonic development but these keratins are not expressed by the animals before hatching 257 The description of feathered dinosaurs has not been without controversy in general perhaps the most vocal critics have been Alan Feduccia and Theagarten Lingham Soliar who have proposed that some purported feather like fossils are the result of the decomposition of collagenous fiber that underlaid the dinosaurs skin 258 259 260 and that maniraptoran dinosaurs with vaned feathers were not actually dinosaurs but convergent with dinosaurs 248 259 However their views have for the most part not been accepted by other researchers to the point that the scientific nature of Feduccia s proposals has been questioned 261 Archaeopteryx was the first fossil found that revealed a potential connection between dinosaurs and birds It is considered a transitional fossil in that it displays features of both groups Brought to light just two years after Charles Darwin s seminal On the Origin of Species 1859 its discovery spurred the nascent debate between proponents of evolutionary biology and creationism This early bird is so dinosaur like that without a clear impression of feathers in the surrounding rock at least one specimen was mistaken for the small theropod Compsognathus 262 Since the 1990s a number of additional feathered dinosaurs have been found providing even stronger evidence of the close relationship between dinosaurs and modern birds Many of these specimens were unearthed in the lagerstatten of the Jehol Biota 255 If feather like structures were indeed widely present among non avian dinosaurs the lack of abundant fossil evidence for them may be due to the fact that delicate features like skin and feathers are seldom preserved by fossilization and thus often absent from the fossil record 263 Skeleton Because feathers are often associated with birds feathered dinosaurs are often touted as the missing link between birds and dinosaurs However the multiple skeletal features also shared by the two groups represent another important line of evidence for paleontologists Areas of the skeleton with important similarities include the neck pubis wrist semi lunate carpal arm and pectoral girdle furcula wishbone and breast bone Comparison of bird and dinosaur skeletons through cladistic analysis strengthens the case for the link 264 Soft anatomy nbsp Pneumatopores on the left ilium of Aerosteon riocoloradensisLarge meat eating dinosaurs had a complex system of air sacs similar to those found in modern birds according to a 2005 investigation led by Patrick M O Connor The lungs of theropod dinosaurs carnivores that walked on two legs and had bird like feet likely pumped air into hollow sacs in their skeletons as is the case in birds What was once formally considered unique to birds was present in some form in the ancestors of birds O Connor said 265 266 In 2008 scientists described Aerosteon riocoloradensis the skeleton of which supplies the strongest evidence to date of a dinosaur with a bird like breathing system CT scanning of Aerosteon s fossil bones revealed evidence for the existence of air sacs within the animal s body cavity 226 267 Behavioral evidence Fossils of the troodonts Mei and Sinornithoides demonstrate that some dinosaurs slept with their heads tucked under their arms 268 This behavior which may have helped to keep the head warm is also characteristic of modern birds Several deinonychosaur and oviraptorosaur specimens have also been found preserved on top of their nests likely brooding in a bird like manner 269 The ratio between egg volume and body mass of adults among these dinosaurs suggest that the eggs were primarily brooded by the male and that the young were highly precocial similar to many modern ground dwelling birds 270 Some dinosaurs are known to have used gizzard stones like modern birds These stones are swallowed by animals to aid digestion and break down food and hard fibers once they enter the stomach When found in association with fossils gizzard stones are called gastroliths 271 Extinction of major groupsMain article Cretaceous Paleogene extinction event All non avian dinosaurs and most lineages of birds 272 became extinct in a mass extinction event called the Cretaceous Paleogene K Pg extinction event at the end of the Cretaceous period Above the Cretaceous Paleogene boundary which has been dated to 66 038 0 025 million years ago 273 fossils of non avian dinosaurs disappear abruptly the absence of dinosaur fossils was historically used to assign rocks to the ensuing Cenozoic The nature of the event that caused this mass extinction has been extensively studied since the 1970s leading to the development of two mechanisms that are thought to have played major roles an extraterrestrial impact event in the Yucatan Peninsula along with flood basalt volcanism in India However the specific mechanisms of the extinction event and the extent of its effects on dinosaurs are still areas of ongoing research 274 Alongside dinosaurs many other groups of animals became extinct pterosaurs marine reptiles such as mosasaurs and plesiosaurs several groups of mammals ammonites nautilus like mollusks rudists reef building bivalves and various groups of marine plankton 275 276 In all approximately 47 of genera and 76 of species on Earth became extinct during the K Pg extinction event 277 The relatively large size of most dinosaurs and the low diversity of small bodied dinosaur species at the end of the Cretaceous may have contributed to their extinction 278 the extinction of the bird lineages that did not survive may also have been caused by a dependence on forest habitats or a lack of adaptations to eating seeds for survival 279 280 Pre extinction diversity Just before the K Pg extinction event the number of non avian dinosaur species that existed globally has been estimated at between 628 and 1078 281 It remains uncertain whether the diversity of dinosaurs was in gradual decline before the K Pg extinction event or whether dinosaurs were actually thriving prior to the extinction Rock formations from the Maastrichtian epoch which directly preceded the extinction have been found to have lower diversity than the preceding Campanian epoch which led to the prevailing view of a long term decline in diversity 275 276 282 However these comparisons did not account either for varying preservation potential between rock units or for different extents of exploration and excavation 274 In 1984 Dale Russell carried out an analysis to account for these biases and found no evidence of a decline 283 another analysis by David Fastovsky and colleagues in 2004 even showed that dinosaur diversity continually increased until the extinction 284 but this analysis has been rebutted 285 Since then different approaches based on statistics and mathematical models have variously supported either a sudden extinction 274 281 286 or a gradual decline 287 288 End Cretaceous trends in diversity may have varied between dinosaur lineages it has been suggested that sauropods were not in decline while ornithischians and theropods were in decline 289 290 Impact event Main article Chicxulub crater nbsp Luis left and his son Walter Alvarez right at the K T Boundary in Gubbio Italy 1981 nbsp The Chicxulub Crater at the tip of the Yucatan Peninsula the impactor that formed this crater may have caused the dinosaur extinction The bolide impact hypothesis first brought to wide attention in 1980 by Walter Alvarez Luis Alvarez and colleagues attributes the K Pg extinction event to a bolide extraterrestrial projectile impact 291 Alvarez and colleagues proposed that a sudden increase in iridium levels recorded around the world in rock deposits at the Cretaceous Paleogene boundary was direct evidence of the impact 292 Shocked quartz indicative of a strong shockwave emanating from an impact was also found worldwide 293 The actual impact site remained elusive until a crater measuring 180 km 110 mi wide was discovered in the Yucatan Peninsula of southeastern Mexico and was publicized in a 1991 paper by Alan Hildebrand and colleagues 294 Now the bulk of the evidence suggests that a bolide 5 to 15 kilometers 3 to 9 1 2 miles wide impacted the Yucatan Peninsula 66 million years ago forming this crater 295 and creating a kill mechanism that triggered the extinction event 296 297 298 Within hours the Chicxulub impact would have created immediate effects such as earthquakes 299 tsunamis 300 and a global firestorm that likely killed unsheltered animals and started wildfires 301 302 However it would also have had longer term consequences for the environment Within days sulfate aerosols released from rocks at the impact site would have contributed to acid rain and ocean acidification 303 304 Soot aerosols are thought to have spread around the world over the ensuing months and years they would have cooled the surface of the Earth by reflecting thermal radiation and greatly slowed photosynthesis by blocking out sunlight thus creating an impact winter 274 305 306 This role was ascribed to sulfate aerosols until experiments demonstrated otherwise 304 The cessation of photosynthesis would have led to the collapse of food webs depending on leafy plants which included all dinosaurs save for grain eating birds 280 Deccan Traps Main article Deccan Traps At the time of the K Pg extinction the Deccan Traps flood basalts of India were actively erupting The eruptions can be separated into three phases around the K Pg boundary two prior to the boundary and one after The second phase which occurred very close to the boundary would have extruded 70 to 80 of the volume of these eruptions in intermittent pulses that occurred around 100 000 years apart 307 308 Greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide would have been released by this volcanic activity 309 310 resulting in climate change through temperature perturbations of roughly 3 C 5 4 F but possibly as high as 7 C 13 F 311 Like the Chicxulub impact the eruptions may also have released sulfate aerosols which would have caused acid rain and global cooling 312 However due to large error margins in the dating of the eruptions the role of the Deccan Traps in the K Pg extinction remains unclear 273 274 313 Before 2000 arguments that the Deccan Traps eruptions as opposed to the Chicxulub impact caused the extinction were usually linked to the view that the extinction was gradual Prior to the discovery of the Chicxulub crater the Deccan Traps were used to explain the global iridium layer 309 314 even after the crater s discovery the impact was still thought to only have had a regional not global effect on the extinction event 315 In response Luis Alvarez rejected volcanic activity as an explanation for the iridium layer and the extinction as a whole 316 Since then however most researchers have adopted a more moderate position which identifies the Chicxulub impact as the primary progenitor of the extinction while also recognizing that the Deccan Traps may also have played a role Walter Alvarez himself has acknowledged that the Deccan Traps and other ecological factors may have contributed to the extinctions in addition to the Chicxulub impact 317 Some estimates have placed the start of the second phase in the Deccan Traps eruptions within 50 000 years after the Chicxulub impact 318 Combined with mathematical modelling of the seismic waves that would have been generated by the impact this has led to the suggestion that the Chicxulub impact may have triggered these eruptions by increasing the permeability of the mantle plume underlying the Deccan Traps 319 320 Whether the Deccan Traps were a major cause of the extinction on par with the Chicxulub impact remains uncertain Proponents consider the climatic impact of the sulfur dioxide released to have been on par with the Chicxulub impact and also note the role of flood basalt volcanism in other mass extinctions like the Permian Triassic extinction event 321 322 They consider the Chicxulub impact to have worsened the ongoing climate change caused by the eruptions 323 Meanwhile detractors point out the sudden nature of the extinction and that other pulses in Deccan Traps activity of comparable magnitude did not appear to have caused extinctions They also contend that the causes of different mass extinctions should be assessed separately 324 In 2020 Alfio Chiarenza and colleagues suggested that the Deccan Traps may even have had the opposite effect they suggested that the long term warming caused by its carbon dioxide emissions may have dampened the impact winter from the Chicxulub impact 298 Possible Paleocene survivors Non avian dinosaur remains have occasionally been found above the K Pg boundary In 2000 Spencer Lucas and colleagues reported the discovery of a single hadrosaur right femur in the San Juan Basin of New Mexico and described it as evidence of Paleocene dinosaurs The rock unit in which the bone was discovered has been dated to the early Paleocene epoch approximately 64 8 million years ago 325 If the bone was not re deposited by weathering action it would provide evidence that some dinosaur populations survived at least half a million years into the Cenozoic 326 Other evidence includes the presence of dinosaur remains in the Hell Creek Formation up to 1 3 m 4 3 ft above the Cretaceous Paleogene boundary representing 40 000 years of elapsed time This has been used to support the view that the K Pg extinction was gradual 327 However these supposed Paleocene dinosaurs are considered by many other researchers to be reworked that is washed out of their original locations and then re buried in younger sediments 328 329 330 The age estimates have also been considered unreliable 331 Cultural depictionsMain article Cultural depictions of dinosaurs nbsp Outdated Iguanodon statues created by Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins for the Crystal Palace Park in 1853 source source source source source source Gertie the Dinosaur 1914 by Winsor McCay featuring the first animated dinosaurBy human standards dinosaurs were creatures of fantastic appearance and often enormous size As such they have captured the popular imagination and become an enduring part of human culture The entry of the word dinosaur into the common vernacular reflects the animals cultural importance in English dinosaur is commonly used to describe anything that is impractically large obsolete or bound for extinction 332 Public enthusiasm for dinosaurs first developed in Victorian England where in 1854 three decades after the first scientific descriptions of dinosaur remains a menagerie of lifelike dinosaur sculptures was unveiled in London s Crystal Palace Park The Crystal Palace dinosaurs proved so popular that a strong market in smaller replicas soon developed In subsequent decades dinosaur exhibits opened at parks and museums around the world ensuring that successive generations would be introduced to the animals in an immersive and exciting way 333 The enduring popularity of dinosaurs in its turn has resulted in significant public funding for dinosaur science and has frequently spurred new discoveries In the United States for example the competition between museums for public attention led directly to the Bone Wars of the 1880s and 1890s during which a pair of feuding paleontologists made enormous scientific contributions 334 The popular preoccupation with dinosaurs has ensured their appearance in literature film and other media Beginning in 1852 with a passing mention in Charles Dickens Bleak House 335 dinosaurs have been featured in large numbers of fictional works Jules Verne s 1864 novel Journey to the Center of the Earth Sir Arthur Conan Doyle s 1912 book The Lost World the 1914 animated film Gertie the Dinosaur featuring the first animated dinosaur the iconic 1933 film King Kong the 1954 Godzilla and its many sequels the best selling 1990 novel Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton and its 1993 film adaptation are just a few notable examples of dinosaur appearances in fiction Authors of general interest non fiction works about dinosaurs including some prominent paleontologists have often sought to use the animals as a way to educate readers about science in general Dinosaurs are ubiquitous in advertising numerous companies have referenced dinosaurs in printed or televised advertisements either in order to sell their own products or in order to characterize their rivals as slow moving dim witted or obsolete 336 337 See alsoDinosaur diet and feeding Evolutionary history of life Lists of dinosaur bearing stratigraphic units List of dinosaur genera List of bird genera List of birds List of informally named dinosaurs List of films featuring dinosaursFurther readingUniversity of Southampton September 29 2021 Two New Species of Large Predatory Dinosaur With Crocodile Like Skulls Discovered on Isle of Wight SciTechDaily Zhou Zhonghe October 2004 The origin and early evolution of birds discoveries disputes and perspectives from fossil evidence PDF Naturwissenschaften Berlin Springer Science Business Media 91 10 455 471 Bibcode 2004NW 91 455Z doi 10 1007 s00114 004 0570 4 ISSN 0028 1042 PMID 15365634 S2CID 3329625 Archived from the original PDF on July 21 2011 Retrieved November 6 2019 Paul Gregory S 2002 Dinosaurs of the Air The Evolution and Loss of Flight in Dinosaurs and Birds Baltimore London Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 6763 7 LCCN 2001000242 OCLC 1088130487 Stewart Tabori amp Chang 1997 The Humongous Book of Dinosaurs New York Stewart Tabori amp Chang ISBN 978 1 55670 596 0 LCCN 97000398 OCLC 1037269801 Sternberg Charles Mortram 1966 Original edition published by E Cloutier printer to the King 1946 Canadian Dinosaurs Geological Series Vol 54 2nd ed Ottawa National Museum of Canada LCCN gs46000214 OCLC 1032865683 Notes Dinosaurs including birds are members of the natural group Reptilia Their biology does not precisely correspond to the antiquated class Reptilia of Linnaean taxonomy consisting of cold blooded amniotes without fur or feathers As Linnean taxonomy was formulated for modern animals prior to the study of evolution and paleontology it fails to account for extinct animals with intermediate traits between traditional classes BibliographyAlvarez Walter 1997 T rex and the Crater of Doom Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 01630 6 LCCN 96049208 OCLC 1007846558 Retrieved November 4 2019 Bakker Robert T 1986 The Dinosaur Heresies New Theories Unlocking the Mystery of the Dinosaurs and Their Extinction New York William Morrow and Company ISBN 978 0 688 04287 5 LCCN 86012643 OCLC 13699558 Retrieved November 6 2019 Benton Michael J 2005 Vertebrate Palaeontology 3rd ed Malden MA Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 0 632 05637 8 LCCN 2003028152 OCLC 53970617 Retrieved October 30 2019 Brusatte Stephen L 2012 Benton Michael J ed Dinosaur Paleobiology Topics in Paleobiology Foreword by Michael J Benton Hoboken NJ Wiley Blackwell Bibcode 2012dipa book B doi 10 1002 9781118274071 ISBN 978 0 470 65658 7 LCCN 2011050466 OCLC 781864955 Chiappe Luis M Witmer Lawrence M eds 2002 Mesozoic Birds Above the Heads of Dinosaurs Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 20094 4 LCCN 2001044600 OCLC 901747962 Colbert Edwin H 1971 Originally published New York E P Dutton 1968 London Evans Brothers Ltd 1969 Men and Dinosaurs The Search in Field and Laboratory Harmondsworth Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 021288 4 OCLC 16208760 Retrieved October 31 2019 Cowen Richard 2005 History of Life 4th ed Malden MA Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1 4051 1756 2 LCCN 2003027993 OCLC 53970577 The 5th edition of the book is available from the Internet Archive Retrieved 2019 10 19 Currie Philip J Padian Kevin eds 1997 Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs San Diego CA Academic Press ISBN 978 0 12 226810 6 LCCN 97023430 OCLC 436848919 Retrieved October 30 2019 Currie Philip J Koppelhus Eva B Shugar Martin A Wright Joanna L eds 2004 Feathered Dragons Studies on the Transition from Dinosaurs to Birds Life of the Past Bloomington IN Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 34373 4 LCCN 2003019035 OCLC 52942941 Curry Rogers Kristina A Wilson Jeffrey A eds 2005 The Sauropods Evolution and Paleobiology Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 24623 2 LCCN 2005010624 OCLC 879179542 Desmond Adrian J 1975 The Hot Blooded Dinosaurs A Revolution in Palaeontology London Blond amp Briggs ISBN 978 0 8037 3755 6 LCCN 76359907 OL 4933052M Retrieved October 30 2019 Dickens Charles 1853 Bleak House London Bradbury and Evans Retrieved November 7 2019 Dodson Peter Gingerich Philip D eds 1993 Functional Morphology and Evolution American Journal of Science Vol 293A New Haven CT Kline Geology Laboratory Yale University ISSN 0002 9599 OCLC 27781160 Dong Zhiming 1992 Dinosaurian Faunas of China English ed Beijing Berlin New York China Ocean Press Springer Verlag ISBN 978 3 540 52084 9 LCCN 92207835 OCLC 26522845 Dyke Gareth Kaiser Gary eds 2011 Living Dinosaurs The Evolutionary History of Modern Birds Chichester Hoboken NJ Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 0 470 65666 2 LCCN 2010043277 OCLC 729724640 Farlow James O Brett Surman M K eds 1997 The Complete Dinosaur Bloomington IN Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 33349 0 LCCN 97 23698 OCLC 924985811 Retrieved October 14 2019 Foster John R Lucas Spencer G eds 2006 Paleontology and Geology of the Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation Bulletin of the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin Albuquerque NM New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science 36 ISSN 1524 4156 OCLC 77520577 Retrieved October 21 2019 Glut Donald F 1997 Dinosaurs The Encyclopedia Foreword by Michael K Brett Surman Jefferson NC McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 89950 917 4 LCCN 95047668 OCLC 33665881 Gunther Robert Theodore ed 1968 First printed in Oxford 1945 Life and Letters of Edward Lhwyd Early Science in Oxford Vol XIV Preface by Albert Everard Gunther Reprint ed London Dawsons of Pall Mall ISBN 978 0 7129 0292 2 LCCN 22005926 OCLC 43529321 Retrieved November 4 2019 Hansell Mike 2000 Bird Nests and Construction Behaviour Pen and ink illustration by Raith Overhill Cambridge University of Cambridge Press ISBN 978 0 521 46038 5 LCCN 99087681 OCLC 876286627 Retrieved October 30 2019 Heilmann Gerhard 1926 The Origin of Birds London New York H F amp G Witherby D Appleton amp Company LCCN 27001127 OCLC 606021642 Holmes Thom 1998 Fossil Feud The Rivalry of the First American Dinosaur Hunters Parsippany NJ Julian Messner ISBN 978 0 382 39149 1 LCCN 96013610 OCLC 34472600 Holtz Thomas R Jr 2007 Dinosaurs The Most Complete Up to Date Encyclopedia for Dinosaur Lovers of All Ages Illustrated by Luis V Rey New York Random House ISBN 978 0 375 82419 7 LCCN 2006102491 OCLC 77486015 Retrieved October 22 2019 Lambert David The Diagram Group 1990 The Dinosaur Data Book The Definitive Fully Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs New York Avon Books ISBN 978 0 380 75896 8 LCCN 89092487 OCLC 21833417 Retrieved October 14 2019 Lessem Don Glut Donald F 1993 The Dinosaur Society s Dinosaur Encyclopedia Illustrations by Tracy Lee Ford scientific advisors Peter Dodson et al New York Random House ISBN 978 0 679 41770 5 LCCN 94117716 OCLC 30361459 Retrieved October 30 2019 Lhuyd Edward 1699 Lithophylacii Britannici ichnographia British figured stones London Ex Officina M C Archived from the original on August 14 2020 Retrieved November 4 2019 Mayr Gerald 2009 Paleogene Fossil Birds Berlin Springer Verlag doi 10 1007 978 3 540 89628 9 ISBN 978 3 540 89627 2 LCCN 2008940962 OCLC 916182693 S2CID 88941254 Retrieved October 30 2019 Norell Mark Gaffney Eugene S Dingus Lowell 2000 Originally published as Discovering Dinosaurs in the American Museum of Natural History New York Knopf 1995 Discovering Dinosaurs Evolution Extinction and the Lessons of Prehistory Revised ed Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 22501 5 LCCN 99053335 OCLC 977125867 Retrieved October 30 2019 Olshevsky George 2000 An Annotated Checklist of Dinosaur Species by Continent Mesozoic Meanderings Vol 3 Illustrated by Tracy Lee Ford San Diego CA Publications Requiring Research ISSN 0271 9428 LCCN 00708700 OCLC 44433611 Owen Richard 1842 Report on British Fossil Reptiles Part II Report of the Eleventh Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science Held at Plymouth in July 1841 London John Murray pp 60 204 ISBN 978 0 8201 1526 9 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