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Ankylosauria

Ankylosauria is a group of herbivorous dinosaurs of the order Ornithischia. It includes the great majority of dinosaurs with armor in the form of bony osteoderms, similar to turtles. Ankylosaurs were bulky quadrupeds, with short, powerful limbs. They are known to have first appeared in the Middle Jurassic, and persisted until the end of the Cretaceous Period. The two main families of Ankylosaurs, Nodosauridae and Ankylosauridae are primarily known from the Northern Hemisphere, but the more basal Parankylosauria are known from southern Gondwana during the Cretaceous.

Ankylosaurs
Temporal range:
Middle JurassicLate Cretaceous, Bajocian–Maastrichtian
Collection of ankylosaurs. From top left to right: Liaoningosaurus, Edmontonia, Tianzhenosaurus, Gargoyleosaurus, Scolosaurus, Denversaurus, Gastonia, Borealopelta and Akainacephalus.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Order: Ornithischia
Clade: Thyreophora
Clade: Eurypoda
Suborder: Ankylosauria
Osborn, 1923
Subgroups
Synonyms[2]
  • Ankylosauromorpha Carpenter, 2001

Ankylosauria was first named by Henry Fairfield Osborn in 1923.[3] In the Linnaean classification system, the group is usually considered either a suborder or an infraorder. It is contained within the group Thyreophora, which also includes the stegosaurs, armored dinosaurs known for their combination of plates and spikes.

Etymology

The name of this group of dinosaurs is associated with a number of anatomical features in which small and large bony shields fused together, completely covering their back and sides. On the skull these shields fused with the underlying bones, and the dorsal ribs fit snugly to the vertebrae. The Latin name Ankylosauria is derived from the Greek ἀγκύλος [ankylos] — "curved", "bent" with the anatomical meaning "hard" or "fused" and σαῦρος [sauros] — "lizard".[4]

In the 1908 description of the genus Ankylosaurus, Barnum Brown described the family Ankylosauridae as a group of representatives with a "rigid spine", but noted the wide, curved shape of the ribs, suggesting a "strongly curved" back[5] (an error based on the alleged similarity to stegosaurs and glyptodonts, as ankylosaurs have flat backs). Therefore, "rigid lizard" and "curved lizard" could be additional meanings applied to the name of ankylosaurs.[4]

Classification

Ankylosauria and Stegosauria together form the two major subgroups of Thyreophora, a group of armoured dinosaurs distinct from ornithopods and marginocephalians.[2] Historically used for forms lacking large vertical plates, Kenneth Carpenter proposed in 1997 the first informal definition of the group, as all ornithischians closer to Ankylosaurus than Stegosaurus.[6] This definition was further refined by Paul Sereno in 2005 to specify Ankylosaurus magniventris and Stegosaurus stenops, the type species of both genera, a definition that was followed by Madzia and colleagues in 2021 when the group name and definition was formalized following the PhyloCode.[2] Phylogenetic and morphological studies have differed on the inclusion of certain early taxa into Ankylosauria, especially the armoured Early Jurassic form Scelidosaurus. As some analyses, like that of Carpenter from 2001 or David B. Norman in 2021 find Scelidosaurus and possibly other early forms like Emausaurus and Scutellosaurus to fall closer to Ankylosaurus than Stegosaurus, Carpenter and later Norman suggested redefining Ankylosauria to limit it to the two subclades Nodosauridae and Ankylosauridae, creating the new clade Ankylosauromorpha for all taxa closer to Ankylosaurus than Stegosaurus.[2][7][8] However, as historically even these primitive forms were considered ankylosaurs if they were more derived than Stegosaurus, Madzia and colleagues considered a redefinition of Ankylosauria to be undesirable, instead preferring to abandon Ankylosauromorpha as a same-definition junior synonym of Ankylosauria. The informal clade Euankylosauria, suggested by Norman as an alternative to redefining Ankylosauria, was discussed as potentially being useful in future for the typical group of nodosaurids and ankylosaurids,[2] and was defined in 2021 by Soto-Acuña and colleagues as such as the result of their novel phylogenetic results, which grouped Antarctopelta, Kunbarrasaurus (Minmi sp. of earlier analyses) and their new taxon Stegouros as a unique group of non-euankylosaurian ankylosaurs, which they gave the name Parankylosauria. The result of their phylogenetic analysis is below.[1]

Evolution

The origin of ankylosaurs is poorly understood, and only a few specimens from the Middle Jurassic are known.[9] The ancestry of ankylosaurs has long been sought among stegosaurs, the closest group to ankylosaurs compared to other dinosaurs. Currently, ankylosaurs are a close group of stegosaurs within the Eurypoda clade.[10] They are united by the presence of osteoderms in the skin, the narrow triangular skull of stegosaurs is similar to that of nodosaurids, and some similarity is found in the structure of the palate.[11] Since stegosaurs are known from the Middle Jurassic,[12] ankylosaurs are probably of the same age. They may have split up during the Aalenian period, more than 170 million years ago, but they were definitely in Africa by the Bathonian due to the presence of Spicomellus in Morocco.[13] There are no well-preserved remains of ankylosaurs of that age. An incomplete radius and ulna from the Isle of Skye in Scotland are known, the exact affiliation of which to ankylosaurs or stegosaurs is not established.[14] Most likely, ankylosaurs followed a different evolutionary path than stegosaurs, although it is unknown when and how they split off. In the latter, the osteoderms become raised, and the lateral protection disappears.[15] Ankylosaurs evolved towards the development of osteoderms on the surface of the skull, increased armor and further consolidation of the carapace,[16] which suggests that the ancestor of the carapace consisted of separate non-fused osteoderms.[17]

Paleobiology

 
Armour of the nodosaurid Edmontonia

Possible neonate-sized ankylosaur fossils have been documented in the scientific literature.[18]

Armor

All ankylosaurians had armor over much of their bodies, mostly scutes and nodules, with large spines in some cases. The scutes, or plates, are rectangular to oval objects organized in transverse (side to side) rows, often with keels on the upper surface. Smaller nodules and plates filled in the open spaces between large plates. In all three groups, the first two rows of plates tend to form a sort of half-ring around the neck; in nodosaurids, this comes from adjacent plates fusing with each other (and there is a third row as well), while ankylosaurids usually have the plates fused to the top of another band of bone. The skull has armor plastered on to it, including a distinctive piece on the outside-rear of the lower jaw.

Diet and feeding

Ankylosaurs were built low to the ground, typically one foot off the ground surface. They had small, triangular teeth that were loosely packed, similar to stegosaurs. The large hyoid bones left in skeletons indicates that they had long, flexible tongues. They also had a large, side secondary palate. This means that they could breathe while chewing, unlike crocodiles. Their expanded gut region suggests the use of fermentation to digest their food, using symbiotic bacteria and gut flora. Their diet likely consisted of ferns, cycads, and angiosperms. Mallon et al. (2013) examined herbivore coexistence on the island continent of Laramidia during the Late Cretaceous. It was concluded that ankylosaurs were generally restricted to feeding on vegetation at, or below, the height of 1 meter.[19]

Vocalization

In February 2023, scientists reported that the possible sounds ankylosaurs may have made were bird-like vocalizations based on a finding of a fossilized larynx from the ankylosaur Pinacosaurus grangeri.[20][21]

References

  1. ^ a b Soto-Acuña, Sergio; Vargas, Alexander; Kaluza, Jonatan; Leppe, Marcelo; Botelho, Joao; Palma-Liberona, José; Gutstein, Carolina; Fernández, Roy; Ortiz, Hector; Milla, Verónica; Aravena, Bárbara; Manríquez, Leslie M. E.; Alarcón-Muñoz, Jhonatan; Pino, Juan Pablo; Trevisan, Cristine; Mansilla, Héctor; Hinojosa, Luis Felipe; Muñoz-Walther, Vicente; Rubilar-Rogers, David (2021). "Bizarre tail weaponry in a transitional ankylosaur from subantarctic Chile". Nature. 600 (7888): 259–263. doi:10.1038/s41586-021-04147-1. PMID 34853468. S2CID 244799975.
  2. ^ a b c d e Madzia, D.; Arbour, V.M.; Boyd, C.A.; Farke, A.A.; Cruzado-Caballero, P.; Evans, D.C. (2021). "The phylogenetic nomenclature of ornithischian dinosaurs". PeerJ. 9: e12362. doi:10.7717/peerj.12362. PMC 8667728. PMID 34966571.
  3. ^ Osborn, H. F. (1923). "Two Lower Cretaceous dinosaurs of Mongolia." American Museum Novitates, 95: 1–10.[1]
  4. ^ a b Ben Creisler, Dinosauria Translation and Pronunciation Guide. 2011-11-11 at the Wayback Machine
  5. ^ Brown, B. 1908. The Ankylosauridae, a new family of armored dinosaurs from the Upper Cretaceous. American Museum of Natural History Bulletin 24: 187—201.
  6. ^ Carpenter, K., 1997, "Ankylosauria" pp. 16-20 in: P.J. Currie and K. Padian (eds.), Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs, Academic Press, San Diego
  7. ^ Carpenter, K. (2001). "Phylogenetic Analysis of the Ankylosauria". In Carpenter, Kenneth (ed.). The Armored Dinosaurs. Indiana University Press. p. 455. ISBN 0-253-33964-2.
  8. ^ Norman, D.B. (2021). "Scelidosaurus harrisonii (Dinosauria: Ornithischia) from the Early Jurassic of Dorset, England: biology and phylogenetic relationships". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 191 (1): 1–86. doi:10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa061.
  9. ^ Arbour, V. M., Currie, P. J. 2016. Systematics, phylogeny and palaeobiogeography of the ankylosaurid dinosaurs. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 14 (5): 385—444.
  10. ^ Norman, D. B., Witmer, L. M. and Weishampel, D. B. 2004. Basal Thyreophora. Pр. 335—342. In D. B. Weishampel, P. Dodson, and H. Osmolska (eds.), The Dinosauria. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  11. ^ T.A. Tumanova, 1987, "Pantsirnyye dinozavry Mongolii", Trudy Sovmestnaya Sovetsko-Mongol'skaya Paleontologicheskaya Ekspeditsiya 32: 1-80.
  12. ^ "PBDB".
  13. ^ Maidment, Susannah C. R.; Strachan, Sarah J.; Ouarhache, Driss; Scheyer, Torsten M.; Brown, Emily E.; Fernandez, Vincent; Johanson, Zerina; Raven, Thomas J.; Barrett, Paul M. (2021-09-23). "Bizarre dermal armour suggests the first African ankylosaur". Nature Ecology & Evolution. 5 (12): 1576–1581. doi:10.1038/s41559-021-01553-6. ISSN 2397-334X. PMID 34556830. S2CID 237616095.
  14. ^ Clark, N.D.L. 2001. A thyreophoran dinosaur from the early Bajocian (Middle Jurassic) of the Isle of Skye, Scotland. Scottish Journal of Geology, 37: 19—26.
  15. ^ Coombs, W. P. 1978. The families of the ornithischian dinosaur order Ankylosauria. Journal of Paleontology 21: 143—170.
  16. ^ Maryanska, T. 1977. Ankylosauridae (Dinosauria) from Mongolia. Palaeontologia Polonica, 37: 85—151.
  17. ^ T.A. Tumanova, 1987, "Pantsirnyye dinozavry Mongolii", Trudy Sovmestnaya Sovetsko-Mongol'skaya Paleontologicheskaya Ekspeditsiya 32: 1-80.
  18. ^ Tanke, D.H. and Brett-Surman, M.K. 2001. Evidence of Hatchling and Nestling-Size Hadrosaurs (Reptilia:Ornithischia) from Dinosaur Provincial Park (Dinosaur Park Formation: Campanian), Alberta, Canada. pp. 206-218. In: Mesozoic Vertebrate Life—New Research Inspired by the Paleontology of Philip J. Currie. Edited by D.H. Tanke and K. Carpenter. Indiana University Press: Bloomington. xviii + 577 pp.
  19. ^ Mallon, Jordan C; David C Evans; Michael J Ryan; Jason S Anderson (2013). "Feeding height stratification among the herbivorous dinosaurs from the Dinosaur Park Formation (upper Campanian) of Alberta, Canada". BMC Ecology. 13: 14. doi:10.1186/1472-6785-13-14. PMC 3637170. PMID 23557203.
  20. ^ Wilke, Carolyn (24 February 2023). "What Sounds Did Dinosaurs Make? - A new study of a fossilized ankylosaur suggests it could have uttered birdlike calls". The New York Times. Retrieved 26 February 2023.
  21. ^ Yoshida, Junki; Kobayashi, Yoshisuga; Norell, Mark a. (15 February 2023). "An ankylosaur larynx provides insights for bird-like vocalization in non-avian dinosaurs". Communications Biology. 152. doi:10.1038/s42003-023-04513-x. Retrieved 26 February 2023.

ankylosauria, group, herbivorous, dinosaurs, order, ornithischia, includes, great, majority, dinosaurs, with, armor, form, bony, osteoderms, similar, turtles, ankylosaurs, were, bulky, quadrupeds, with, short, powerful, limbs, they, known, have, first, appeare. Ankylosauria is a group of herbivorous dinosaurs of the order Ornithischia It includes the great majority of dinosaurs with armor in the form of bony osteoderms similar to turtles Ankylosaurs were bulky quadrupeds with short powerful limbs They are known to have first appeared in the Middle Jurassic and persisted until the end of the Cretaceous Period The two main families of Ankylosaurs Nodosauridae and Ankylosauridae are primarily known from the Northern Hemisphere but the more basal Parankylosauria are known from southern Gondwana during the Cretaceous AnkylosaursTemporal range Middle Jurassic Late Cretaceous Bajocian Maastrichtian PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NCollection of ankylosaurs From top left to right Liaoningosaurus Edmontonia Tianzhenosaurus Gargoyleosaurus Scolosaurus Denversaurus Gastonia Borealopelta and Akainacephalus Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClade DinosauriaOrder OrnithischiaClade ThyreophoraClade EurypodaSuborder AnkylosauriaOsborn 1923SubgroupsParankylosauria Euankylosauria Soto Acuna et al 2021 1 Ankylosauridae NodosauridaeGenera of uncertain affinityCryptosaurus Dracopelta Mymoorapelta Sarcolestes Serendipaceratops Sinankylosaurus Spicomellus Stegosaurides TianchiasaurusSynonyms 2 Ankylosauromorpha Carpenter 2001Ankylosauria was first named by Henry Fairfield Osborn in 1923 3 In the Linnaean classification system the group is usually considered either a suborder or an infraorder It is contained within the group Thyreophora which also includes the stegosaurs armored dinosaurs known for their combination of plates and spikes Contents 1 Etymology 2 Classification 2 1 Evolution 3 Paleobiology 3 1 Armor 3 2 Diet and feeding 3 3 Vocalization 4 ReferencesEtymology EditThe name of this group of dinosaurs is associated with a number of anatomical features in which small and large bony shields fused together completely covering their back and sides On the skull these shields fused with the underlying bones and the dorsal ribs fit snugly to the vertebrae The Latin name Ankylosauria is derived from the Greek ἀgkylos ankylos curved bent with the anatomical meaning hard or fused and saῦros sauros lizard 4 In the 1908 description of the genus Ankylosaurus Barnum Brown described the family Ankylosauridae as a group of representatives with a rigid spine but noted the wide curved shape of the ribs suggesting a strongly curved back 5 an error based on the alleged similarity to stegosaurs and glyptodonts as ankylosaurs have flat backs Therefore rigid lizard and curved lizard could be additional meanings applied to the name of ankylosaurs 4 Classification EditAnkylosauria and Stegosauria together form the two major subgroups of Thyreophora a group of armoured dinosaurs distinct from ornithopods and marginocephalians 2 Historically used for forms lacking large vertical plates Kenneth Carpenter proposed in 1997 the first informal definition of the group as all ornithischians closer to Ankylosaurus than Stegosaurus 6 This definition was further refined by Paul Sereno in 2005 to specify Ankylosaurus magniventris and Stegosaurus stenops the type species of both genera a definition that was followed by Madzia and colleagues in 2021 when the group name and definition was formalized following the PhyloCode 2 Phylogenetic and morphological studies have differed on the inclusion of certain early taxa into Ankylosauria especially the armoured Early Jurassic form Scelidosaurus As some analyses like that of Carpenter from 2001 or David B Norman in 2021 find Scelidosaurus and possibly other early forms like Emausaurus and Scutellosaurus to fall closer to Ankylosaurus than Stegosaurus Carpenter and later Norman suggested redefining Ankylosauria to limit it to the two subclades Nodosauridae and Ankylosauridae creating the new clade Ankylosauromorpha for all taxa closer to Ankylosaurus than Stegosaurus 2 7 8 However as historically even these primitive forms were considered ankylosaurs if they were more derived than Stegosaurus Madzia and colleagues considered a redefinition of Ankylosauria to be undesirable instead preferring to abandon Ankylosauromorpha as a same definition junior synonym of Ankylosauria The informal clade Euankylosauria suggested by Norman as an alternative to redefining Ankylosauria was discussed as potentially being useful in future for the typical group of nodosaurids and ankylosaurids 2 and was defined in 2021 by Soto Acuna and colleagues as such as the result of their novel phylogenetic results which grouped Antarctopelta Kunbarrasaurus Minmi sp of earlier analyses and their new taxon Stegouros as a unique group of non euankylosaurian ankylosaurs which they gave the name Parankylosauria The result of their phylogenetic analysis is below 1 Thyreophora ScelidosaurusStegosauriaAnkylosauria Parankylosauria KunbarrasaurusAntarctopeltaStegourosEuankylosauria Nodosauridae CedarpeltaDongyangopeltaGargoyleosaurusGastoniaHylaeosaurusMymoorapeltaPanoplosaurusPeloroplitesPolacanthusHoplitosaurusSauroplitesTaohelongNodosaurinaeAnkylosauridae AletopeltaChuanqilongLiaoningosaurusGobisaurusShamosaurusAnkylosaurinaeEvolution Edit The origin of ankylosaurs is poorly understood and only a few specimens from the Middle Jurassic are known 9 The ancestry of ankylosaurs has long been sought among stegosaurs the closest group to ankylosaurs compared to other dinosaurs Currently ankylosaurs are a close group of stegosaurs within the Eurypoda clade 10 They are united by the presence of osteoderms in the skin the narrow triangular skull of stegosaurs is similar to that of nodosaurids and some similarity is found in the structure of the palate 11 Since stegosaurs are known from the Middle Jurassic 12 ankylosaurs are probably of the same age They may have split up during the Aalenian period more than 170 million years ago but they were definitely in Africa by the Bathonian due to the presence of Spicomellus in Morocco 13 There are no well preserved remains of ankylosaurs of that age An incomplete radius and ulna from the Isle of Skye in Scotland are known the exact affiliation of which to ankylosaurs or stegosaurs is not established 14 Most likely ankylosaurs followed a different evolutionary path than stegosaurs although it is unknown when and how they split off In the latter the osteoderms become raised and the lateral protection disappears 15 Ankylosaurs evolved towards the development of osteoderms on the surface of the skull increased armor and further consolidation of the carapace 16 which suggests that the ancestor of the carapace consisted of separate non fused osteoderms 17 Paleobiology Edit Armour of the nodosaurid Edmontonia Possible neonate sized ankylosaur fossils have been documented in the scientific literature 18 Armor Edit All ankylosaurians had armor over much of their bodies mostly scutes and nodules with large spines in some cases The scutes or plates are rectangular to oval objects organized in transverse side to side rows often with keels on the upper surface Smaller nodules and plates filled in the open spaces between large plates In all three groups the first two rows of plates tend to form a sort of half ring around the neck in nodosaurids this comes from adjacent plates fusing with each other and there is a third row as well while ankylosaurids usually have the plates fused to the top of another band of bone The skull has armor plastered on to it including a distinctive piece on the outside rear of the lower jaw Diet and feeding Edit Ankylosaurs were built low to the ground typically one foot off the ground surface They had small triangular teeth that were loosely packed similar to stegosaurs The large hyoid bones left in skeletons indicates that they had long flexible tongues They also had a large side secondary palate This means that they could breathe while chewing unlike crocodiles Their expanded gut region suggests the use of fermentation to digest their food using symbiotic bacteria and gut flora Their diet likely consisted of ferns cycads and angiosperms Mallon et al 2013 examined herbivore coexistence on the island continent of Laramidia during the Late Cretaceous It was concluded that ankylosaurs were generally restricted to feeding on vegetation at or below the height of 1 meter 19 Vocalization Edit In February 2023 scientists reported that the possible sounds ankylosaurs may have made were bird like vocalizations based on a finding of a fossilized larynx from the ankylosaur Pinacosaurus grangeri 20 21 References Edit a b Soto Acuna Sergio Vargas Alexander Kaluza Jonatan Leppe Marcelo Botelho Joao Palma Liberona Jose Gutstein Carolina Fernandez Roy Ortiz Hector Milla Veronica Aravena Barbara Manriquez Leslie M E Alarcon Munoz Jhonatan Pino Juan Pablo Trevisan Cristine Mansilla Hector Hinojosa Luis Felipe Munoz Walther Vicente Rubilar Rogers David 2021 Bizarre tail weaponry in a transitional ankylosaur from subantarctic Chile Nature 600 7888 259 263 doi 10 1038 s41586 021 04147 1 PMID 34853468 S2CID 244799975 a b c d e Madzia D Arbour V M Boyd C A Farke A A Cruzado Caballero P Evans D C 2021 The phylogenetic nomenclature of ornithischian dinosaurs PeerJ 9 e12362 doi 10 7717 peerj 12362 PMC 8667728 PMID 34966571 Osborn H F 1923 Two Lower Cretaceous dinosaurs of Mongolia American Museum Novitates 95 1 10 1 a b Ben Creisler Dinosauria Translation and Pronunciation Guide Archived 2011 11 11 at the Wayback Machine Brown B 1908 The Ankylosauridae a new family of armored dinosaurs from the Upper Cretaceous American Museum of Natural History Bulletin 24 187 201 Carpenter K 1997 Ankylosauria pp 16 20 in P J Currie and K Padian eds Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs Academic Press San Diego Carpenter K 2001 Phylogenetic Analysis of the Ankylosauria In Carpenter Kenneth ed The Armored Dinosaurs Indiana University Press p 455 ISBN 0 253 33964 2 Norman D B 2021 Scelidosaurus harrisonii Dinosauria Ornithischia from the Early Jurassic of Dorset England biology and phylogenetic relationships Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 191 1 1 86 doi 10 1093 zoolinnean zlaa061 Arbour V M Currie P J 2016 Systematics phylogeny and palaeobiogeography of the ankylosaurid dinosaurs Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 14 5 385 444 Norman D B Witmer L M and Weishampel D B 2004 Basal Thyreophora Pr 335 342 In D B Weishampel P Dodson and H Osmolska eds The Dinosauria Berkeley University of California Press T A Tumanova 1987 Pantsirnyye dinozavry Mongolii Trudy Sovmestnaya Sovetsko Mongol skaya Paleontologicheskaya Ekspeditsiya 32 1 80 PBDB Maidment Susannah C R Strachan Sarah J Ouarhache Driss Scheyer Torsten M Brown Emily E Fernandez Vincent Johanson Zerina Raven Thomas J Barrett Paul M 2021 09 23 Bizarre dermal armour suggests the first African ankylosaur Nature Ecology amp Evolution 5 12 1576 1581 doi 10 1038 s41559 021 01553 6 ISSN 2397 334X PMID 34556830 S2CID 237616095 Clark N D L 2001 A thyreophoran dinosaur from the early Bajocian Middle Jurassic of the Isle of Skye Scotland Scottish Journal of Geology 37 19 26 Coombs W P 1978 The families of the ornithischian dinosaur order Ankylosauria Journal of Paleontology 21 143 170 Maryanska T 1977 Ankylosauridae Dinosauria from Mongolia Palaeontologia Polonica 37 85 151 T A Tumanova 1987 Pantsirnyye dinozavry Mongolii Trudy Sovmestnaya Sovetsko Mongol skaya Paleontologicheskaya Ekspeditsiya 32 1 80 Tanke D H and Brett Surman M K 2001 Evidence of Hatchling and Nestling Size Hadrosaurs Reptilia Ornithischia from Dinosaur Provincial Park Dinosaur Park Formation Campanian Alberta Canada pp 206 218 In Mesozoic Vertebrate Life New Research Inspired by the Paleontology of Philip J Currie Edited by D H Tanke and K Carpenter Indiana University Press Bloomington xviii 577 pp Mallon Jordan C David C Evans Michael J Ryan Jason S Anderson 2013 Feeding height stratification among the herbivorous dinosaurs from the Dinosaur Park Formation upper Campanian of Alberta Canada BMC Ecology 13 14 doi 10 1186 1472 6785 13 14 PMC 3637170 PMID 23557203 Wilke Carolyn 24 February 2023 What Sounds Did Dinosaurs Make A new study of a fossilized ankylosaur suggests it could have uttered birdlike calls The New York Times Retrieved 26 February 2023 Yoshida Junki Kobayashi Yoshisuga Norell Mark a 15 February 2023 An ankylosaur larynx provides insights for bird like vocalization in non avian dinosaurs Communications Biology 152 doi 10 1038 s42003 023 04513 x Retrieved 26 February 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ankylosauria amp oldid 1141726752, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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