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Parasaurolophus

Parasaurolophus (/ˌpærəsɔːˈrɒləfəs, -ˌsɔːrəˈlfəs/; meaning "beside crested lizard" in reference to Saurolophus)[2] is a genus of hadrosaurid "duck-billed" dinosaur that lived in what is now western North America and possibly Asia during the Late Cretaceous period, about 76.5–73 million years ago.[3] It was a large herbivore that could reach over 9 metres (30 ft) long and weigh over 5 metric tons (5.5 short tons), and were able to move as a biped and a quadruped. Three species are universally recognized: P. walkeri (the type species), P. tubicen, and the short-crested P. cyrtocristatus. Additionally, a fourth species, P. jiayinensis, has been proposed, although it is more commonly placed in the separate genus Charonosaurus. Remains are known from Alberta, New Mexico, and Utah, as well as possibly Heilongjiang if Charonosaurus is in fact part of the genus. The genus was first described in 1922 by William Parks from a skull and partial skeleton found in Alberta.

Parasaurolophus
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous (Campanian), 76.9–73.5 Ma
Possible record during the Maastrichtian
P. cyrtocristatus skeletal mount at the Field Museum of Natural History.
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Clade: Ornithischia
Clade: Ornithopoda
Family: Hadrosauridae
Subfamily: Lambeosaurinae
Tribe: Parasaurolophini
Genus: Parasaurolophus
Parks, 1922
Type species
Parasaurolophus walkeri
Parks, 1922
Other species
Synonyms[1]

Parasaurolophus was a hadrosaurid, part of a diverse family of large Late Cretaceous ornithopods that are known for their range of bizarre head adornments, which were likely used for communication and increased hearing. This genus is known for its large, elaborate cranial crest, which forms a long curved tube projecting upwards and back from the skull in its largest form. Charonosaurus from China, which may have been its closest relative, had a similar skull and a potentially similar crest. Visual recognition of both species and sex, acoustic resonance, and thermoregulation have been proposed as functional explanations for the crest. It is one of the rarer hadrosaurids, known from only a handful of good specimens.

Discovery and naming edit

 
Holotype specimen of P. walkeri, showing the pathologic v-shaped notch

Meaning "near crested lizard", the name Parasaurolophus is derived from the Greek words para/παρα ("beside" or "near"), saurus/σαυρος ("lizard"), and lophos/λοφος ("crest").[4] It is based on ROM 768, a skull and partial skeleton missing most of the tail and the back legs below the knees, which was found by a field party from the University of Toronto in 1920 near Sand Creek along the Red Deer River in Alberta.[5] These rocks are now known as the Campanian age Late Cretaceous Dinosaur Park Formation. William Parks named the specimen P. walkeri in honor of Sir Byron Edmund Walker, the chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Royal Ontario Museum.[5] Parasaurolophus remains are rare in Alberta,[6] with only one other partial skull that is possibly from the Dinosaur Park Formation[7] and three Dinosaur Park specimens lacking their skulls that possibly belong to the genus.[6] In some faunal lists, there is a mention of possible P. walkeri material in the Hell Creek Formation of Montana, a rock unit of the late Maastrichtian age.[8] This occurrence is not noted by Sullivan and Williamson in their 1999 review of the genus[9] and has not been further elaborated upon elsewhere.

In 1921, Charles H. Sternberg recovered a partial skull (PMU.R1250) from what is now known as the slightly younger Kirtland Formation in San Juan County, New Mexico. This specimen was sent to Uppsala, where Carl Wiman described it as a second species, P. tubicen, in 1931.[10] The specific epithet is derived from the Latin word tǔbǐcěn, meaning "trumpeter".[11] A second, nearly complete P. tubicen skull (NMMNH P-25100) was found in New Mexico in 1995. Using computed tomography of this skull, Robert Sullivan and Thomas Williamson gave the genus a monographic treatment in 1999 that covered aspects of its anatomy and taxonomy, as well as the functions of its crest.[9] Williamson later published an independent review of the remains that disagreed with the taxonomic conclusions.[12]

John Ostrom described another good specimen (FMNH P27393) from New Mexico as P. cyrtocristatus in 1961. It includes a partial skull with a short, rounded crest and much of the postcranial skeleton except for the feet, neck, and parts of the tail.[13] Its specific name is derived from the Latin words curtus, meaning "shortened" and cristatus, meaning "crested".[11] The specimen was found in either the top of the Fruitland Formation or, more likely, the base of the overlying Kirtland Formation.[9] The range of this species was described in 1979, when David B. Weishampel and James A. Jensen described a partial skull with a similar crest (BYU 2467) from the Campanian age Kaiparowits Formation of Garfield County, Utah.[14] Since then, another skull has been found in Utah with the short, rounded P. cyrtocristatus crest morphology.[9]

Species edit

 
Holotype skulls of the three species arranged by age

Parasaurolophus is known from three certain species: P. walkeri, P. tubicen, and P. cyrtocristatus.[3] All of them can be clearly distinguished from each other and have many differences.[15][16] The first named species, therefore the type, is P. walkeri. One certain specimen from the Dinosaur Park Formation is referred to it,[17] but many more are almost certainly referable.[3] Like stated above, it is different from the other two species, with it having a simpler internal structure than P. tubicen,[9] along with a straighter crest and different internal structuring than P. cyrtocristatus.[15]

The next named species is P. tubicen, which is the largest of the Parasaurolophus species.[9] It lived in New Mexico, where three specimens are known,[17] and can be differentiated from its other species.[15] It possesses a long and straight crest, with a very complex interior compared to the other species.[9] All known specimens of P. tubicen come from the De-Na-Zin Member of the Kirtland Formation.[18]

In 1961, the third species, P. cyrtocristatus was named by John Ostrom.[13] Its three known specimens have been found in the Fruitland and Kaiparowits formations of Utah and New Mexico.[3] The second specimen, the first known from the Kaiparowits Formation, was originally unassigned to a specific taxon.[14] Of the Parasaurolophus species, P. cyrtocristatus is the smallest and has the most curved crest.[9] Because of its possession of the two above features, it has often been speculated that it was a female of P. walkeri or P. tubicen, which were all thought to be males,[15][19] although P. tubicen lived approximately a million years later.[3] As noted by Thomas Williamson, the type material of P. cyrtocristatus is about 72% the size of P. tubicen, close to the size at which other lambeosaurines are interpreted to begin showing definitive sexual dimorphism in their crests (~70% of adult size).[12] Even though many scientists have supported the possible fact of P. cyrtocristatus being a female,[19][20] many other studies have found that it is not[17][7] because of the differences in age, distribution, and the large differences in the crest and its internal structure.[15]

A study published in PLoS ONE in 2014 found that one more species could be referred to Parasaurolophus. This study, led by Xing, found Charonosaurus jiayensis was actually nested deeply inside Parasaurolophus, which created the new species P. jiayensis. If this species is indeed inside Parasaurolophus, then the genus therefore lasted until the K-Pg extinction and is known from two continents.[21]

Description edit

 
Size comparison of P. cyrtocristatus (left, violet) and P. walkeri (right, blue)

Like most dinosaurs, the skeleton of Parasaurolophus is incompletely known. The length of the type specimen of P. walkeri is estimated at 9.45 metres (31.0 ft),[22] and allometry-based body mass estimates indicate that a 9 metres (30 ft) long individual would have weighed more than 5 metric tons (5.5 short tons).[23] Gregory S. Paul estimated that an average adult individual of the type species would measure 7.5 metres (25 ft) long and weigh 2.6 metric tons (2.9 short tons).[24] Its skull is about 1.6 m (5 ft 3 in) long, including the crest, whereas the type skull of P. tubicen is over 2 m (6 ft 7 in) long, indicating it was a larger animal.[25] Its single known arm was relatively short for a hadrosaurid, with a short but wide shoulder blade. The thighbone measures 103 cm (41 in) long in P. walkeri and is robust for its length when compared to other hadrosaurids.[25] The upper arm and pelvic bones were also heavily built.[26]

Like other hadrosaurids, it was able to walk on either two legs or four. It probably preferred to forage for food on four legs, but ran on two.[8] The neural spines of the vertebrae were tall, as was common in lambeosaurines.[25] At their tallest over the hips, they increased the height of the back. Skin impressions are known for P. walkeri, showing uniform tubercle-like scales, but no larger structures.[5]

Skull edit

 
Closeup of P. walkeri beak and teeth

The most noticeable feature was the cranial crest that protruded from the rear of the head and was made up of the premaxilla and nasal bones.[25] The crest was hollow, with distinct tubes leading from each nostril to the end of the crest before reversing direction and heading back down the crest and into the skull. The tubes were simplest in P. walkeri, and more complex in P. tubicen, where some tubes were blind and others met and separated.[9] While P. walkeri and P. tubicen had long crests with slight curvature, P. cyrtocristatus had a short crest with a more circular profile.[13]

Classification edit

As its name implies, Parasaurolophus was initially thought to be closely related to Saurolophus because of its superficially similar crest.[5] However, it was soon reassessed as a member of the lambeosaurine subfamily of hadrosaurids—Saurolophus is a hadrosaurine.[27] It is usually interpreted as a separate offshoot of the lambeosaurines, distinct from the helmet-crested Corythosaurus, Hypacrosaurus, and Lambeosaurus.[8][7] Its closest known relative appears to be Charonosaurus, a lambeosaurine with a similar skull (but no complete crest yet) from the Amur region of northeastern China.[28] The two may form the clade Parasaurolophini. P. cyrtocristatus, with its short, rounded crest, may be the most basal of the three known Parasaurolophus species[7] or it may represent subadult or female specimens of P. tubicen.[12]

 
Restoration of P. walkeri

The following cladogram is after the 2007 redescription of Lambeosaurus magnicristatus (Evans and Reisz, 2007):[7]

 Hadrosauridae 

Hadrosaurinae

 Lambeosaurinae 

Aralosaurus

unnamed

Tsintaosaurus

unnamed

Jaxartosaurus

unnamed

Amurosaurus

unnamed
unnamed

Charonosaurus

 Parasaurolophus 

P. cyrtocristatus

unnamed

P. tubicen

P. walkeri

unnamed

Paleobiology edit

 
P. walkeri head with scalation detail.

Diet and feeding edit

As a hadrosaurid, Parasaurolophus was a large bipedal and quadrupedal herbivore, eating plants with a sophisticated skull that permitted a grinding motion analogous to chewing. Its teeth were continually being replaced and were packed into dental batteries containing hundreds of teeth, but only a relative handful of which were in use at any time. It used its beak to crop plant material, which was held in the jaws by a cheek-like organ. Vegetation could have been taken from the ground up to a height of around 4 m (13 ft).[17] As noted by Robert Bakker, lambeosaurines have narrower beaks than hadrosaurines, implying that Parasaurolophus and its relatives could feed more selectively than their broad-beaked, crestless counterparts. Parasaurolophus had a diet consisting of leaves, twigs, and pine needles which would imply that it was a browser.[29]

Growth edit

 
Juvenile skeleton RAM 14000 (nicknamed Joe)

Parasaurolophus is known from many adult specimens, and a juvenile described in 2013, numbered RAM 140000 and nicknamed Joe,[30] after a volunteer at the Raymond M. Alf Museum of Paleontology (RAM). The juvenile was discovered in the Kaiparowits Formation in 2009. Excavated by the joint expedition by museum and The Webb Schools, the juvenile has been identified as around only one year old when it died. Referred to Parasaurolophus sp., the juvenile is the most complete, as well as youngest Parasaurolophus ever found, and measures 2.5 m (8.2 ft). This individual fits neatly into the currently known Parasaurolophus growth stages, and lived approximately 75 million years ago. Even though no complete skull of the intermediate age between RAM 14000 and adult Parasaurolophus has been found yet, a partial braincase of about the right size is known. At 25% of the total adult size, the juvenile show that crest growth of Parasaurolophus began sooner than in related genera, such as Corythosaurus. It has been suggested that Parasaurolophus adults bore such large crests, especially when compared to the related Corythosaurus, because of this difference in age between when their crests started developing. Its age also means that Parasaurolophus had a very fast growth rate, which took place in about a year. The crest of the juvenile is not long and tubular like the adults, but low and hemispherical.[22]

 
Reconstruction of a juvenile skeleton, based on RAM 14000

The skull of RAM 14000 is almost complete, with the left side only lacking a piece of the maxilla. However, the skull was split down the middle by erosion, possibly when it was resting on the bottom of a river bed. The two sides are displaced slightly, with some bones of the right being moved off the main block, also by erosion. After reconstruction, the skull viewed from the side resembles other juvenile lambeosaurines found, being roughly a trapezoid in shape.[22]

A partial cranial endocast for RAM 14000 was reconstructed from CT scan data, the first ever for a Parasaurolophus of any ontogenetic stage. The endocast was reconstructed in two sections, one on the portion of the braincase articulated with the left half of the skull and the remainder on the disarticulated portion of the braincase. Their relative position was then approximated based on cranial landmarks and comparison with other hadrosaurids. Because of weathering, many of the smaller neural canals and foramina could not be identified for certain.[22]

Cranial crest edit

 
Diagram showing internal features of the crest

Many hypotheses have been advanced as to what functions the cranial crest of Parasaurolophus performed, but most have been discredited.[31][32] It is now believed that it may have had several functions: visual display for identifying species and sex, sound amplification for communication, and thermoregulation. It is not clear which was most significant at what times in the evolution of the crest and its internal nasal passages.[33]

Differences in crests edit

As for other lambeosaurines, it is believed that the cranial crest of Parasaurolophus changed with age and was a sexually dimorphic characteristic in adults. James Hopson, one of the first researchers to describe lambeosaurine crests in terms of such distinctions, suggested that P. cyrtocristatus, with its small crest, was the female form of P. tubicen.[20] Thomas Williamson suggested it was the juvenile form. Neither hypothesis became widely accepted. As only six good skulls, one juvenile braincase,[12] and one recently discovered juvenile skull are known,[22] additional material will help clear up these potential relationships. Williamson noted that in any case, juvenile Parasaurolophus probably had small, rounded crests like P. cyrtocristatus, that probably grew faster as individuals approached sexual maturity.[12] Recent restudy of a juvenile braincase previously assigned to Lambeosaurus, now assigned to Parasaurolophus, provides evidence that a small tubular crest was present in juveniles. This specimen preserves a small upward flaring of the frontal bones that was similar to but smaller than what is seen in adult specimens; in adults, the frontals formed a platform that supported the base of the crest. This specimen also indicates that the growth of the crest in Parasaurolophus and the facial profile of juvenile individuals differed from the Corythosaurus-Hypacrosaurus-Lambeosaurus model, in part because the crest of Parasaurolophus lacks the thin bony 'coxcomb' that makes up the upper portion of the crest of the other three lambeosaurines.[7]

Rejected function hypotheses edit

 
Comparison drawing between the crests of P. cyrtocristatus (above) and P. walkeri (below)

Many early suggestions focused on adaptations for an aquatic lifestyle, following the hypothesis that hadrosaurids were amphibious, a common line of thought until the 1960s. Thus, Alfred Sherwood Romer proposed it served as a snorkel,[34] Martin Wilfarth that it was an attachment for a mobile proboscis used as a breathing tube or for food gathering,[35] Charles M. Sternberg that it served as an airtrap to keep water out of the lungs,[36] and Ned Colbert that it served as an air reservoir for prolonged stays underwater.[37]

Other proposals were more mechanical in nature. William Parks, in 1922, suggested that the crest was joined to the vertebrae above the shoulders by ligaments or muscles, and helped with moving and supporting the head.[5] This is unlikely, because in all modern archosaurs, the nuchal ligament attaches to the neck or base of the skull.[38] Othenio Abel proposed it was used as a weapon in combat among members of the same species,[39] and Andrew Milner suggested that it could be used as a foliage deflector, like the helmet crest (called a 'casque') of the cassowary.[32] Still, other proposals made housing specialized organs the major function. Halszka Osmólska suggested that it housed salt glands,[40] and John Ostrom suggested that it housed expanded areas for olfactory tissue and much improved sense of smell of the lambeosaurines, which had no obvious defensive capabilities.[41]

Most of these hypotheses have been discredited or rejected.[31] For example, there is no hole at the end of the crest for a snorkeling function. There are no muscle scars for a proboscis and it is dubious that an animal with a beak would need one. As a proposed airlock, it would not have kept out water. The proposed air reservoir would have been insufficient for an animal the size of Parasaurolophus. Other hadrosaurids had large heads without needing large hollow crests to serve as attachment points for supporting ligaments.[41] Also, none of the proposals explain why the crest has such a shape, why other lambeosaurines should have crests that look much different but perform a similar function, how crestless or solid-crested hadrosaurids got along without such capabilities, or why some hadrosaurids had solid crests. These considerations particularly impact hypotheses based on increasing the capabilities of systems already present in the animal, such as the salt gland and olfaction hypotheses,[32] and indicate that these were not primary functions of the crest. Additionally, work on the nasal cavity of lambeosaurines shows that olfactory nerves and corresponding sensory tissue were largely outside the portion of the nasal passages in the crest, so the expansion of the crest had little to do with the sense of smell.[33]

Temperature regulation hypothesis edit

The large surface area and vascularization of the crest also suggests a thermoregulatory function.[42] The first to propose the cranial crests of lambeosaurines related to temperature regulation was Wheeler (1978). He proposed that there was a nerve connection between the crest and the brain, so that the latter could be cooled by the former.[43][44] The next people to publish a related idea were Teresa Maryańska and Osmólska, who realized that like modern lizards, dinosaurs could have possessed salt glands, and cooled off by osmo-regulation.[44][40] In 2006 Evans published an argument about the functions of lambeosaurine crests, and supported why this could be a causing factor for the evolution of the crest.[33]

Behavioral hypotheses edit

 
Restoration of Charonosaurus, P. tubicen, P. walkeri, and P. cyrtocristatus

Parasaurolophus is often hypothesized to have used its crest as a resonating chamber to produce low frequency sounds to alert other members of a group or its species.[19] This function was originally suggested by Wiman in 1931 when he described P. tubicen. He noted that the crest's internal structures are similar to those of a swan and theorized that an animal could use its elongated nasal passages to create noise.[19][10] However, the nasal tubes of Hypacrosaurus, Corythosaurus, and Lambeosaurus are much more variable and complicated than the airway of Parasaurolophus. A large amount of material and data supports the hypothesis that the large, tubular crest of Parasaurolophus was a resonating chamber. Weishampel in 1981 suggested that Parasaurolophus made noises ranging between the frequencies 55 and 720 Hz, although there was some difference in the range of individual species because of the crest size, shape, and nasal passage length, most obvious in P. cyrtocristatus (interpreted as a possible female).[19] Hopson found that there is anatomical evidence that hadrosaurids had a strong hearing. There is at least one example, in the related Corythosaurus, of a slender stapes (reptilian ear bone) in place, which combined with a large space for an eardrum implies a sensitive middle ear. Furthermore, the hadrosaurid lagena is elongate like a crocodilian's, indicating that the auditory portion of the inner ear was well-developed.[20] Based on the similarity of hadrosaurid inner ears to those of crocodiles, he also proposed that adult hadrosaurids were sensitive to high frequencies, such as their offspring might produce. According to Weishampel, this is consistent with parents and offspring communicating.[19]

Computer modeling of a well-preserved specimen of P. tubicen, with more complex air passages than those of P. walkeri, has allowed the reconstruction of the possible sound its crest produced.[45] The main path resonates at around 30 Hz, but the complicated sinus anatomy causes peaks and valleys in the sound.[46] The other main behavioral theory is that the crest was used for intra-species recognition.[44] This means that the crest could have been used for species recognition, as a warning signal, and for other, non-sexual uses. These could have been some of the reasons crests evolved in Parasaurolophus and other hadrosaurids.[15] Instead, social and physiological functions have become more supported as function(s) of the crest, focusing on visual and auditory identification and communication. As a large object, the crest has clear value as a visual signal and sets this animal apart from its contemporaries. The large size of hadrosaurid eye sockets and the presence of sclerotic rings in the eyes imply acute vision and diurnal habits, evidence that sight was important to these animals. If, as is commonly illustrated, a skin frill extended from the crest to the neck or back, the proposed visual display would have been even showier.[20] As is suggested by other lambeosaurine skulls, the crest of Parasaurolophus likely permitted both species identification (such as separating it from Corythosaurus or Lambeosaurus) and sexual identification by shape and size.[33]

Soft tissue frill edit

 
Restoration of P. walkeri with hypothetical skin frill

Barnum Brown (1912) noted the presence of fine striations near the back of the crest that he hypothesized could be associated with the presence of a frill of skin, comparable to the one found in the modern basilisk lizard. His hypothesis was seemingly supported by skin preserved above the neck and back of Corythosaurus and Edmontosaurus. Subsequently, reconstructions of Parasaurolophus with a substantial frill of skin between the crest and neck appeared in influential paleoart including murals by Charles R. Knight and in the Walt Disney animated film, Fantasia. This led to the frill being depicted in many other sources, though the advent of the now-debunked "snorkel" hypothesis, and conflation of the frill hypothesis with the idea that the crest serves as an anchor point for neck ligaments, along with lack of strong evidence for its presence, has seen it fall out of favor in most modern depictions.[38]

Paleopathology edit

 
P. walkeri with notch in the vertebrae

P. walkeri is known from one specimen which might contain a pathology. The skeleton shows a v-shaped gap or notch in the vertebrae at the base of the neck.[16] Originally thought to be pathologic, Parks published a second interpretation of this, as a ligament attachment to support the head. The crest would attach to the gap via muscles or ligaments, and be used to support the head while bearing a frill, like predicted to exist in some hadrosaurids.[5] One other possibility, is that during preparation, the specimen was damaged, creating the possible pathology.[16] The notch, however, is still considered more likely to be a pathology,[16][31] even though some illustrations of Parasaurolophus restore the skin flap.[9]

Another possible pathology was noticed by Parks, and from around the notch. In the fourth, fifth, and sixth vertebrae, directly anterior to the notch, the neural spines were damaged. The fourth had an obvious fracture, with the other two possessing a swelling at the base of the break.[5]

Analysis of the pathology undertaken by Bertozzo et al., published in December 2020, suggests the pathology to the shoulder and thoracic ribs in the holotype of P. walkeri was plausibly the result of the dinosaur being hit by a falling tree, perhaps during a severe storm. Based on the regrowth of bone, it is suggested that the hadrosaur survived for at least one to four months to perhaps years after being injured. None of the pathologies on the holotype individual are believed to have caused or contributed to its death.[47]

Paleoecology edit

Alberta edit

 
P. walkeri in Dinosaur Park Formation environment

Parasaurolophus walkeri, from the Dinosaur Park Formation, was a member of a diverse and well-documented fauna of prehistoric animals, including well-known dinosaurs such as the horned Centrosaurus, Chasmosaurus, and Styracosaurus; ornithomimids Struthiomimus; fellow duckbills Gryposaurus and Corythosaurus; tyrannosaurids Gorgosaurus and Daspletosaurus; and armored Edmontonia, Euoplocephalus and Dyoplosaurus.[8] It was a rare constituent of this fauna.[6] The Dinosaur Park Formation is interpreted as a low-relief setting of rivers and floodplains that became more swampy and influenced by marine conditions over time as the Western Interior Seaway transgressed westward.[6] The climate was warmer than present-day Alberta, without frost, but with wetter and drier seasons. Conifers were apparently the dominant canopy plants, with an understory of ferns, tree ferns, and angiosperms.[6]

Some of the less common hadrosaurs in the Dinosaur Park Formation of Dinosaur Provincial Park, such as Parasaurolophus, may represent the remains of individuals who died while migrating through the region. They might also have had a more upland habitat where they may have nested or fed. The presence of Parasaurolophus and Kritosaurus in northern latitude fossil sites may represent faunal exchange between otherwise distinct northern and southern biomes in Late Cretaceous North America. Both taxa are uncommon outside of the southern biome, where, along with Pentaceratops, they are predominate members of the fauna.[48]

New Mexico edit

 
Teratophoneus attacking a P. cyrtocristatus

In the Fruitland Formation of New Mexico, P. cyrtocristatus shared its habitat with other ornithischians and theropods. Specifically, its contemporaries were the ceratopsian Pentaceratops sternbergii;[8] the pachycephalosaur Stegoceras novomexicanum;[49] and some unidentified fossils belonging to Tyrannosauridae, ?Ornithomimus, ?Troodontidae, ?Saurornitholestes langstoni, ?Struthiomimus, Ornithopoda, ?Chasmosaurus, ?Corythosaurus, Hadrosaurinae, Hadrosauridae, and Ceratopsidae.[8] When Parasaurolophus existed, the Fruitland Formation was swampy, positioned in the lowlands, and close to the shore of the Cretaceous Interior Seaway. The lowermost part of the Fruitland Formation is just younger than 75.56 ± 0.41 mya, with the uppermost boundary dating to 74.55 ± 0.22 mya.[50]

Existing slightly later than the species from the Fruitland Formation, P. tubicen is also found in New Mexico, in the Kirtland Formation.[8] Numerous vertebrate groups are from this formation, including fishes, crurotarsans,[50] ornithischians, saurischians,[8] pterosaurs,[51] and turtles. The fishes are represented by the two species Melvius chauliodous and Myledalphus bipartitus. The crurotarsans include Brachychampsa montana and Denazinosuchus kirtlandicus.[50] Ornithischians from the formation are represented by the hadrosaurids Anasazisaurus horneri, Naashoibitosaurus ostromi, Kritosaurus navajovius, and P. tubicen; the ankylosaurids Ahshislepelta minor and Nodocephalosaurus kirtlandensis; the ceratopsians Pentaceratops sternbergii[8] and Titanoceratops ouranos;[52] and the pachycephalosaurs Stegoceras novomexicanum[49] and Sphaerotholus goodwini.[50] Saurischians include the tyrannosaurid Bistahieversor sealeyi;[53] the ornithomimid Ornithomimus sp.;[8] and the troodontid "Saurornitholestes" robustus.[54] One pterosaur is known, named Navajodactylus boerei.[51] Turtles are fairly plentiful, and are known from Denazinemys nodosa, Basilemys nobilis, Neurankylus baueri, Plastomenus robustus and Thescelus hemispherica. Unidentified taxa are known, including the crurotarsan ?Leidyosuchus,[50] and the theropods ?Struthiomimus, Troodontidae and Tyrannosauridae.[8] The beginning of the Kirtland Formation dates to 74.55 ± 0.22 mya, with the formation ending at around 73.05 ± 0.25 mya.[50]

Utah edit

 
 
Skull from the Kaiparowits Formation tentatively assigned to P. cyrtocristatus

Argon-argon radiometric dating indicates that the Kaiparowits Formation was deposited between 76.6 and 74.5 million years ago, during the Campanian age of the Late Cretaceous period.[55][56] During the Late Cretaceous period, the site of the Kaiparowits Formation was located near the western shore of the Western Interior Seaway, a large inland sea that split North America into two landmasses, Laramidia to the west and Appalachia to the east. The plateau where dinosaurs lived was an ancient floodplain dominated by large channels and abundant wetland peat swamps, ponds and lakes, and was bordered by highlands. The climate was wet and humid, and supported an abundant and diverse range of organisms.[57] This formation contains one of the best and most continuous records of Late Cretaceous terrestrial life in the world.[58]

Parasaurolophus shared its paleoenvironment with other dinosaurs, such as dromaeosaurid theropods, the troodontid Talos sampsoni, ornithomimids like Ornithomimus velox, tyrannosaurids like Teratophoneus, armored ankylosaurids, the duckbilled hadrosaur Gryposaurus monumentensis, the ceratopsians Utahceratops gettyi, Nasutoceratops titusi and Kosmoceratops richardsoni and the oviraptorosaurian Hagryphus giganteus.[59] Paleofauna present in the Kaiparowits Formation included chondrichthyans (sharks and rays), frogs, salamanders, turtles, lizards and crocodilians like the apex predator Deinosuchus. A variety of early mammals were present including multituberculates, marsupials, and insectivorans.[60]

See also edit

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Martin 2014.
  2. ^ Colbert, Edwin H. (Edwin Harris); Knight, Charles Robert (1951). The dinosaur book: the ruling reptiles and their relatives. New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 152.
  3. ^ a b c d e Evans et al. 2009.
  4. ^ Liddell & Scott 1980.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Parks 1922.
  6. ^ a b c d e Currie & Koppelhus 2005.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Evans & Reisz 2007.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Weishampel et al. 2004.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Sullivan & Williamson 1999.
  10. ^ a b Wiman 1931.
  11. ^ a b Simpson 1979.
  12. ^ a b c d e Williamson 2000.
  13. ^ a b c Ostrom 1961.
  14. ^ a b Weishampel & Jensen 1979.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Hone et al. 2011.
  16. ^ a b c d Benson et al. 2012.
  17. ^ a b c d Horner et al. 2004.
  18. ^ Sullivan et al. 2011.
  19. ^ a b c d e f Weishampel 1981.
  20. ^ a b c d Hopson 1975.
  21. ^ Xing et al. 2014.
  22. ^ a b c d e Farke et al. 2013.
  23. ^ Seebacher, F. (2001). "A new method to calculate allometric length-mass relationships of dinosaurs" (PDF). Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 21 (1): 51–60. doi:10.1671/0272-4634(2001)021[0051:ANMTCA]2.0.CO;2. JSTOR 4524171. S2CID 53446536.
  24. ^ Paul, Gregory S. (2016). The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs. Princeton University Press. p. 341. ISBN 978-1-78684-190-2. OCLC 985402380.
  25. ^ a b c d Lull & Wright 1942.
  26. ^ Brett-Surman & Wagner 2006.
  27. ^ Gilmore 1924.
  28. ^ Godefroit et al. 2000.
  29. ^ Bakker 1986.
  30. ^ "Joe the Dinosaur". Raymond Alf Museum. Retrieved March 31, 2021.
  31. ^ a b c Glut 1997.
  32. ^ a b c Norman 1985.
  33. ^ a b c d Evans 2006.
  34. ^ Romer 1933.
  35. ^ Wilfarth 1947.
  36. ^ Sternberg 1935.
  37. ^ Colbert 1945.
  38. ^ a b Manucci, F, Dempsey, M, Tanke, D H., et al. Description and etiology of paleopathological lesions in the type specimen of Parasaurolophus walkeri (Dinosauria: Hadrosauridae), with proposed reconstructions of the nuchal ligament J. Anat. 2020; 00: 1– 15. https://doi.org/10.1111/joa.13363
  39. ^ Abel 1924.
  40. ^ a b Maryanska & Osmolska 1979.
  41. ^ a b Ostrom 1962.
  42. ^ Sullivan & Williamson 1996.
  43. ^ Wheeler 1978.
  44. ^ a b c Weishampel 1997.
  45. ^ Sandia 1997.
  46. ^ Diegert & Williamson 1998.
  47. ^ Bertozzo, Filippo; Manucci, Fabio; Dempsey, Matthew; Tanke, Darren H.; Evans, David C.; Ruffell, Alastair; Murphy, Eileen (2020). "Description and etiology of paleopathological lesions in the type specimen of Parasaurolophus walkeri (Dinosauria: Hadrosauridae), with proposed reconstructions of the nuchal ligament". Journal of Anatomy. 238 (5): 1055–1069. doi:10.1111/joa.13363. PMC 8053592. PMID 33289113.
  48. ^ Tanke & Carpenter 2001.
  49. ^ a b Jasinski & Sullivan 2011.
  50. ^ a b c d e f Sullivan & Lucas 2006.
  51. ^ a b Sullivan & Fowler 2011.
  52. ^ Longrich 2011.
  53. ^ Carr & Williamson 2010.
  54. ^ Evans et al. 2014.
  55. ^ Roberts et al. 2005.
  56. ^ Eaton 2002.
  57. ^ Titus & Loewen 2013.
  58. ^ Clinton 1996.
  59. ^ Zanno & Sampson 2005.
  60. ^ Eaton et al. 1999.

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  • Xing, H.; Wang, D.; Han, F.; Sullivan, C.; Ma, Q.; He, Y.; Hone, D.W.E.; Yan, R.; Du, F.; Xu, X. (2014). Evans, David C. (ed.). "New Basal Hadrosauroid Dinosaur (Dinosauria: Ornithopoda) with Transitional Features from the Late Cretaceous of Henan Province, China". PLOS ONE. 9 (6): e98821. Bibcode:2014PLoSO...998821X. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0098821. PMC 4047018. PMID 24901454.
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External links edit

  • Strauss, Bob (2014). . About.Com Dinosaurs. Archived from the original on April 7, 2015. Retrieved October 5, 2014.
  • . Sandia National Laboratories. December 5, 1997. Archived from the original on October 6, 2014.
  • Hartman, Scott (2004). "Ornithischians: Parasaurolophus cyrtocristatus". Scott Hartman's Skeletal Drawing.
  • Hartman, Scott (2013). "Ornithischians: Parasaurolophus walkeri". Scott Hartman's Skeletal Drawing.
  •   Media related to Parasaurolophus at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Parasaurolophus at Wikispecies

parasaurolophus, confused, with, parasaurus, ɔː, ɔːr, meaning, beside, crested, lizard, reference, saurolophus, genus, hadrosaurid, duck, billed, dinosaur, that, lived, what, western, north, america, possibly, asia, during, late, cretaceous, period, about, mil. Not to be confused with Parasaurus Parasaurolophus ˌ p aer e s ɔː ˈ r ɒ l e f e s ˌ s ɔːr e ˈ l oʊ f e s meaning beside crested lizard in reference to Saurolophus 2 is a genus of hadrosaurid duck billed dinosaur that lived in what is now western North America and possibly Asia during the Late Cretaceous period about 76 5 73 million years ago 3 It was a large herbivore that could reach over 9 metres 30 ft long and weigh over 5 metric tons 5 5 short tons and were able to move as a biped and a quadruped Three species are universally recognized P walkeri the type species P tubicen and the short crested P cyrtocristatus Additionally a fourth species P jiayinensis has been proposed although it is more commonly placed in the separate genus Charonosaurus Remains are known from Alberta New Mexico and Utah as well as possibly Heilongjiang if Charonosaurus is in fact part of the genus The genus was first described in 1922 by William Parks from a skull and partial skeleton found in Alberta ParasaurolophusTemporal range Late Cretaceous Campanian 76 9 73 5 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Possible record during the Maastrichtian P cyrtocristatus skeletal mount at the Field Museum of Natural History Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Clade Dinosauria Clade Ornithischia Clade Ornithopoda Family Hadrosauridae Subfamily Lambeosaurinae Tribe Parasaurolophini Genus ParasaurolophusParks 1922 Type species Parasaurolophus walkeriParks 1922 Other species P tubicen Wiman 1931 P cyrtocristatus Ostrom 1961 P jiayinensis Godefroit Zan amp Jin 2000 Paul 2010 Synonyms 1 Charonosaurus Godefroit Zan amp Jin 2000 Paralophosaurus Martin 2014 lapsus calami Parasaurolophus was a hadrosaurid part of a diverse family of large Late Cretaceous ornithopods that are known for their range of bizarre head adornments which were likely used for communication and increased hearing This genus is known for its large elaborate cranial crest which forms a long curved tube projecting upwards and back from the skull in its largest form Charonosaurus from China which may have been its closest relative had a similar skull and a potentially similar crest Visual recognition of both species and sex acoustic resonance and thermoregulation have been proposed as functional explanations for the crest It is one of the rarer hadrosaurids known from only a handful of good specimens Contents 1 Discovery and naming 1 1 Species 2 Description 2 1 Skull 3 Classification 4 Paleobiology 4 1 Diet and feeding 4 2 Growth 4 3 Cranial crest 4 3 1 Differences in crests 4 3 2 Rejected function hypotheses 4 3 3 Temperature regulation hypothesis 4 3 4 Behavioral hypotheses 4 3 5 Soft tissue frill 4 4 Paleopathology 5 Paleoecology 5 1 Alberta 5 2 New Mexico 5 3 Utah 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Footnotes 7 2 Citations 8 External linksDiscovery and naming edit nbsp Holotype specimen of P walkeri showing the pathologic v shaped notch Meaning near crested lizard the name Parasaurolophus is derived from the Greek words para para beside or near saurus sayros lizard and lophos lofos crest 4 It is based on ROM 768 a skull and partial skeleton missing most of the tail and the back legs below the knees which was found by a field party from the University of Toronto in 1920 near Sand Creek along the Red Deer River in Alberta 5 These rocks are now known as the Campanian age Late Cretaceous Dinosaur Park Formation William Parks named the specimen P walkeri in honor of Sir Byron Edmund Walker the chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Royal Ontario Museum 5 Parasaurolophus remains are rare in Alberta 6 with only one other partial skull that is possibly from the Dinosaur Park Formation 7 and three Dinosaur Park specimens lacking their skulls that possibly belong to the genus 6 In some faunal lists there is a mention of possible P walkeri material in the Hell Creek Formation of Montana a rock unit of the late Maastrichtian age 8 This occurrence is not noted by Sullivan and Williamson in their 1999 review of the genus 9 and has not been further elaborated upon elsewhere In 1921 Charles H Sternberg recovered a partial skull PMU R1250 from what is now known as the slightly younger Kirtland Formation in San Juan County New Mexico This specimen was sent to Uppsala where Carl Wiman described it as a second species P tubicen in 1931 10 The specific epithet is derived from the Latin word tǔbǐcen meaning trumpeter 11 A second nearly complete P tubicen skull NMMNH P 25100 was found in New Mexico in 1995 Using computed tomography of this skull Robert Sullivan and Thomas Williamson gave the genus a monographic treatment in 1999 that covered aspects of its anatomy and taxonomy as well as the functions of its crest 9 Williamson later published an independent review of the remains that disagreed with the taxonomic conclusions 12 John Ostrom described another good specimen FMNH P27393 from New Mexico as P cyrtocristatus in 1961 It includes a partial skull with a short rounded crest and much of the postcranial skeleton except for the feet neck and parts of the tail 13 Its specific name is derived from the Latin words curtus meaning shortened and cristatus meaning crested 11 The specimen was found in either the top of the Fruitland Formation or more likely the base of the overlying Kirtland Formation 9 The range of this species was described in 1979 when David B Weishampel and James A Jensen described a partial skull with a similar crest BYU 2467 from the Campanian age Kaiparowits Formation of Garfield County Utah 14 Since then another skull has been found in Utah with the short rounded P cyrtocristatus crest morphology 9 Species edit nbsp Holotype skulls of the three species arranged by age Parasaurolophus is known from three certain species P walkeri P tubicen and P cyrtocristatus 3 All of them can be clearly distinguished from each other and have many differences 15 16 The first named species therefore the type is P walkeri One certain specimen from the Dinosaur Park Formation is referred to it 17 but many more are almost certainly referable 3 Like stated above it is different from the other two species with it having a simpler internal structure than P tubicen 9 along with a straighter crest and different internal structuring than P cyrtocristatus 15 The next named species is P tubicen which is the largest of the Parasaurolophus species 9 It lived in New Mexico where three specimens are known 17 and can be differentiated from its other species 15 It possesses a long and straight crest with a very complex interior compared to the other species 9 All known specimens of P tubicen come from the De Na Zin Member of the Kirtland Formation 18 In 1961 the third species P cyrtocristatus was named by John Ostrom 13 Its three known specimens have been found in the Fruitland and Kaiparowits formations of Utah and New Mexico 3 The second specimen the first known from the Kaiparowits Formation was originally unassigned to a specific taxon 14 Of the Parasaurolophus species P cyrtocristatus is the smallest and has the most curved crest 9 Because of its possession of the two above features it has often been speculated that it was a female of P walkeri or P tubicen which were all thought to be males 15 19 although P tubicen lived approximately a million years later 3 As noted by Thomas Williamson the type material of P cyrtocristatus is about 72 the size of P tubicen close to the size at which other lambeosaurines are interpreted to begin showing definitive sexual dimorphism in their crests 70 of adult size 12 Even though many scientists have supported the possible fact of P cyrtocristatus being a female 19 20 many other studies have found that it is not 17 7 because of the differences in age distribution and the large differences in the crest and its internal structure 15 A study published in PLoS ONE in 2014 found that one more species could be referred to Parasaurolophus This study led by Xing found Charonosaurus jiayensis was actually nested deeply inside Parasaurolophus which created the new species P jiayensis If this species is indeed inside Parasaurolophus then the genus therefore lasted until the K Pg extinction and is known from two continents 21 Description edit nbsp Size comparison of P cyrtocristatus left violet and P walkeri right blue Like most dinosaurs the skeleton of Parasaurolophus is incompletely known The length of the type specimen of P walkeri is estimated at 9 45 metres 31 0 ft 22 and allometry based body mass estimates indicate that a 9 metres 30 ft long individual would have weighed more than 5 metric tons 5 5 short tons 23 Gregory S Paul estimated that an average adult individual of the type species would measure 7 5 metres 25 ft long and weigh 2 6 metric tons 2 9 short tons 24 Its skull is about 1 6 m 5 ft 3 in long including the crest whereas the type skull of P tubicen is over 2 m 6 ft 7 in long indicating it was a larger animal 25 Its single known arm was relatively short for a hadrosaurid with a short but wide shoulder blade The thighbone measures 103 cm 41 in long in P walkeri and is robust for its length when compared to other hadrosaurids 25 The upper arm and pelvic bones were also heavily built 26 Like other hadrosaurids it was able to walk on either two legs or four It probably preferred to forage for food on four legs but ran on two 8 The neural spines of the vertebrae were tall as was common in lambeosaurines 25 At their tallest over the hips they increased the height of the back Skin impressions are known for P walkeri showing uniform tubercle like scales but no larger structures 5 Skull edit nbsp Closeup of P walkeri beak and teeth The most noticeable feature was the cranial crest that protruded from the rear of the head and was made up of the premaxilla and nasal bones 25 The crest was hollow with distinct tubes leading from each nostril to the end of the crest before reversing direction and heading back down the crest and into the skull The tubes were simplest in P walkeri and more complex in P tubicen where some tubes were blind and others met and separated 9 While P walkeri and P tubicen had long crests with slight curvature P cyrtocristatus had a short crest with a more circular profile 13 Classification editAs its name implies Parasaurolophus was initially thought to be closely related to Saurolophus because of its superficially similar crest 5 However it was soon reassessed as a member of the lambeosaurine subfamily of hadrosaurids Saurolophus is a hadrosaurine 27 It is usually interpreted as a separate offshoot of the lambeosaurines distinct from the helmet crested Corythosaurus Hypacrosaurus and Lambeosaurus 8 7 Its closest known relative appears to be Charonosaurus a lambeosaurine with a similar skull but no complete crest yet from the Amur region of northeastern China 28 The two may form the clade Parasaurolophini P cyrtocristatus with its short rounded crest may be the most basal of the three known Parasaurolophus species 7 or it may represent subadult or female specimens of P tubicen 12 nbsp Restoration of P walkeri The following cladogram is after the 2007 redescription of Lambeosaurus magnicristatus Evans and Reisz 2007 7 Hadrosauridae Hadrosaurinae Lambeosaurinae Aralosaurus unnamed Tsintaosaurus unnamed Jaxartosaurus unnamed Amurosaurus unnamed unnamed Charonosaurus Parasaurolophus P cyrtocristatus unnamed P tubicen P walkeri unnamed Nipponosaurus unnamed unnamed Lambeosaurus lambei L magnicristatus unnamed Corythosaurus Olorotitan unnamed Hypacrosaurus altispinus H stebingeriPaleobiology edit nbsp P walkeri head with scalation detail Diet and feeding edit As a hadrosaurid Parasaurolophus was a large bipedal and quadrupedal herbivore eating plants with a sophisticated skull that permitted a grinding motion analogous to chewing Its teeth were continually being replaced and were packed into dental batteries containing hundreds of teeth but only a relative handful of which were in use at any time It used its beak to crop plant material which was held in the jaws by a cheek like organ Vegetation could have been taken from the ground up to a height of around 4 m 13 ft 17 As noted by Robert Bakker lambeosaurines have narrower beaks than hadrosaurines implying that Parasaurolophus and its relatives could feed more selectively than their broad beaked crestless counterparts Parasaurolophus had a diet consisting of leaves twigs and pine needles which would imply that it was a browser 29 Growth edit nbsp Juvenile skeleton RAM 14000 nicknamed Joe Parasaurolophus is known from many adult specimens and a juvenile described in 2013 numbered RAM 140000 and nicknamed Joe 30 after a volunteer at the Raymond M Alf Museum of Paleontology RAM The juvenile was discovered in the Kaiparowits Formation in 2009 Excavated by the joint expedition by museum and The Webb Schools the juvenile has been identified as around only one year old when it died Referred to Parasaurolophus sp the juvenile is the most complete as well as youngest Parasaurolophus ever found and measures 2 5 m 8 2 ft This individual fits neatly into the currently known Parasaurolophus growth stages and lived approximately 75 million years ago Even though no complete skull of the intermediate age between RAM 14000 and adult Parasaurolophus has been found yet a partial braincase of about the right size is known At 25 of the total adult size the juvenile show that crest growth of Parasaurolophus began sooner than in related genera such as Corythosaurus It has been suggested that Parasaurolophus adults bore such large crests especially when compared to the related Corythosaurus because of this difference in age between when their crests started developing Its age also means that Parasaurolophus had a very fast growth rate which took place in about a year The crest of the juvenile is not long and tubular like the adults but low and hemispherical 22 nbsp Reconstruction of a juvenile skeleton based on RAM 14000 The skull of RAM 14000 is almost complete with the left side only lacking a piece of the maxilla However the skull was split down the middle by erosion possibly when it was resting on the bottom of a river bed The two sides are displaced slightly with some bones of the right being moved off the main block also by erosion After reconstruction the skull viewed from the side resembles other juvenile lambeosaurines found being roughly a trapezoid in shape 22 A partial cranial endocast for RAM 14000 was reconstructed from CT scan data the first ever for a Parasaurolophus of any ontogenetic stage The endocast was reconstructed in two sections one on the portion of the braincase articulated with the left half of the skull and the remainder on the disarticulated portion of the braincase Their relative position was then approximated based on cranial landmarks and comparison with other hadrosaurids Because of weathering many of the smaller neural canals and foramina could not be identified for certain 22 Cranial crest edit nbsp Diagram showing internal features of the crest Many hypotheses have been advanced as to what functions the cranial crest of Parasaurolophus performed but most have been discredited 31 32 It is now believed that it may have had several functions visual display for identifying species and sex sound amplification for communication and thermoregulation It is not clear which was most significant at what times in the evolution of the crest and its internal nasal passages 33 Differences in crests edit As for other lambeosaurines it is believed that the cranial crest of Parasaurolophus changed with age and was a sexually dimorphic characteristic in adults James Hopson one of the first researchers to describe lambeosaurine crests in terms of such distinctions suggested that P cyrtocristatus with its small crest was the female form of P tubicen 20 Thomas Williamson suggested it was the juvenile form Neither hypothesis became widely accepted As only six good skulls one juvenile braincase 12 and one recently discovered juvenile skull are known 22 additional material will help clear up these potential relationships Williamson noted that in any case juvenile Parasaurolophus probably had small rounded crests like P cyrtocristatus that probably grew faster as individuals approached sexual maturity 12 Recent restudy of a juvenile braincase previously assigned to Lambeosaurus now assigned to Parasaurolophus provides evidence that a small tubular crest was present in juveniles This specimen preserves a small upward flaring of the frontal bones that was similar to but smaller than what is seen in adult specimens in adults the frontals formed a platform that supported the base of the crest This specimen also indicates that the growth of the crest in Parasaurolophus and the facial profile of juvenile individuals differed from the Corythosaurus Hypacrosaurus Lambeosaurus model in part because the crest of Parasaurolophus lacks the thin bony coxcomb that makes up the upper portion of the crest of the other three lambeosaurines 7 Rejected function hypotheses edit nbsp Comparison drawing between the crests of P cyrtocristatus above and P walkeri below Many early suggestions focused on adaptations for an aquatic lifestyle following the hypothesis that hadrosaurids were amphibious a common line of thought until the 1960s Thus Alfred Sherwood Romer proposed it served as a snorkel 34 Martin Wilfarth that it was an attachment for a mobile proboscis used as a breathing tube or for food gathering 35 Charles M Sternberg that it served as an airtrap to keep water out of the lungs 36 and Ned Colbert that it served as an air reservoir for prolonged stays underwater 37 Other proposals were more mechanical in nature William Parks in 1922 suggested that the crest was joined to the vertebrae above the shoulders by ligaments or muscles and helped with moving and supporting the head 5 This is unlikely because in all modern archosaurs the nuchal ligament attaches to the neck or base of the skull 38 Othenio Abel proposed it was used as a weapon in combat among members of the same species 39 and Andrew Milner suggested that it could be used as a foliage deflector like the helmet crest called a casque of the cassowary 32 Still other proposals made housing specialized organs the major function Halszka Osmolska suggested that it housed salt glands 40 and John Ostrom suggested that it housed expanded areas for olfactory tissue and much improved sense of smell of the lambeosaurines which had no obvious defensive capabilities 41 Most of these hypotheses have been discredited or rejected 31 For example there is no hole at the end of the crest for a snorkeling function There are no muscle scars for a proboscis and it is dubious that an animal with a beak would need one As a proposed airlock it would not have kept out water The proposed air reservoir would have been insufficient for an animal the size of Parasaurolophus Other hadrosaurids had large heads without needing large hollow crests to serve as attachment points for supporting ligaments 41 Also none of the proposals explain why the crest has such a shape why other lambeosaurines should have crests that look much different but perform a similar function how crestless or solid crested hadrosaurids got along without such capabilities or why some hadrosaurids had solid crests These considerations particularly impact hypotheses based on increasing the capabilities of systems already present in the animal such as the salt gland and olfaction hypotheses 32 and indicate that these were not primary functions of the crest Additionally work on the nasal cavity of lambeosaurines shows that olfactory nerves and corresponding sensory tissue were largely outside the portion of the nasal passages in the crest so the expansion of the crest had little to do with the sense of smell 33 Temperature regulation hypothesis edit The large surface area and vascularization of the crest also suggests a thermoregulatory function 42 The first to propose the cranial crests of lambeosaurines related to temperature regulation was Wheeler 1978 He proposed that there was a nerve connection between the crest and the brain so that the latter could be cooled by the former 43 44 The next people to publish a related idea were Teresa Maryanska and Osmolska who realized that like modern lizards dinosaurs could have possessed salt glands and cooled off by osmo regulation 44 40 In 2006 Evans published an argument about the functions of lambeosaurine crests and supported why this could be a causing factor for the evolution of the crest 33 Behavioral hypotheses edit nbsp Restoration of Charonosaurus P tubicen P walkeri and P cyrtocristatus Parasaurolophus is often hypothesized to have used its crest as a resonating chamber to produce low frequency sounds to alert other members of a group or its species 19 This function was originally suggested by Wiman in 1931 when he described P tubicen He noted that the crest s internal structures are similar to those of a swan and theorized that an animal could use its elongated nasal passages to create noise 19 10 However the nasal tubes of Hypacrosaurus Corythosaurus and Lambeosaurus are much more variable and complicated than the airway of Parasaurolophus A large amount of material and data supports the hypothesis that the large tubular crest of Parasaurolophus was a resonating chamber Weishampel in 1981 suggested that Parasaurolophus made noises ranging between the frequencies 55 and 720 Hz although there was some difference in the range of individual species because of the crest size shape and nasal passage length most obvious in P cyrtocristatus interpreted as a possible female 19 Hopson found that there is anatomical evidence that hadrosaurids had a strong hearing There is at least one example in the related Corythosaurus of a slender stapes reptilian ear bone in place which combined with a large space for an eardrum implies a sensitive middle ear Furthermore the hadrosaurid lagena is elongate like a crocodilian s indicating that the auditory portion of the inner ear was well developed 20 Based on the similarity of hadrosaurid inner ears to those of crocodiles he also proposed that adult hadrosaurids were sensitive to high frequencies such as their offspring might produce According to Weishampel this is consistent with parents and offspring communicating 19 Computer modeling of a well preserved specimen of P tubicen with more complex air passages than those of P walkeri has allowed the reconstruction of the possible sound its crest produced 45 The main path resonates at around 30 Hz but the complicated sinus anatomy causes peaks and valleys in the sound 46 The other main behavioral theory is that the crest was used for intra species recognition 44 This means that the crest could have been used for species recognition as a warning signal and for other non sexual uses These could have been some of the reasons crests evolved in Parasaurolophus and other hadrosaurids 15 Instead social and physiological functions have become more supported as function s of the crest focusing on visual and auditory identification and communication As a large object the crest has clear value as a visual signal and sets this animal apart from its contemporaries The large size of hadrosaurid eye sockets and the presence of sclerotic rings in the eyes imply acute vision and diurnal habits evidence that sight was important to these animals If as is commonly illustrated a skin frill extended from the crest to the neck or back the proposed visual display would have been even showier 20 As is suggested by other lambeosaurine skulls the crest of Parasaurolophus likely permitted both species identification such as separating it from Corythosaurus or Lambeosaurus and sexual identification by shape and size 33 Soft tissue frill edit nbsp Restoration of P walkeri with hypothetical skin frill Barnum Brown 1912 noted the presence of fine striations near the back of the crest that he hypothesized could be associated with the presence of a frill of skin comparable to the one found in the modern basilisk lizard His hypothesis was seemingly supported by skin preserved above the neck and back of Corythosaurus and Edmontosaurus Subsequently reconstructions of Parasaurolophus with a substantial frill of skin between the crest and neck appeared in influential paleoart including murals by Charles R Knight and in the Walt Disney animated film Fantasia This led to the frill being depicted in many other sources though the advent of the now debunked snorkel hypothesis and conflation of the frill hypothesis with the idea that the crest serves as an anchor point for neck ligaments along with lack of strong evidence for its presence has seen it fall out of favor in most modern depictions 38 Paleopathology edit nbsp P walkeri with notch in the vertebrae P walkeri is known from one specimen which might contain a pathology The skeleton shows a v shaped gap or notch in the vertebrae at the base of the neck 16 Originally thought to be pathologic Parks published a second interpretation of this as a ligament attachment to support the head The crest would attach to the gap via muscles or ligaments and be used to support the head while bearing a frill like predicted to exist in some hadrosaurids 5 One other possibility is that during preparation the specimen was damaged creating the possible pathology 16 The notch however is still considered more likely to be a pathology 16 31 even though some illustrations of Parasaurolophus restore the skin flap 9 Another possible pathology was noticed by Parks and from around the notch In the fourth fifth and sixth vertebrae directly anterior to the notch the neural spines were damaged The fourth had an obvious fracture with the other two possessing a swelling at the base of the break 5 Analysis of the pathology undertaken by Bertozzo et al published in December 2020 suggests the pathology to the shoulder and thoracic ribs in the holotype of P walkeri was plausibly the result of the dinosaur being hit by a falling tree perhaps during a severe storm Based on the regrowth of bone it is suggested that the hadrosaur survived for at least one to four months to perhaps years after being injured None of the pathologies on the holotype individual are believed to have caused or contributed to its death 47 Paleoecology editAlberta edit nbsp P walkeri in Dinosaur Park Formation environment Parasaurolophus walkeri from the Dinosaur Park Formation was a member of a diverse and well documented fauna of prehistoric animals including well known dinosaurs such as the horned Centrosaurus Chasmosaurus and Styracosaurus ornithomimids Struthiomimus fellow duckbills Gryposaurus and Corythosaurus tyrannosaurids Gorgosaurus and Daspletosaurus and armored Edmontonia Euoplocephalus and Dyoplosaurus 8 It was a rare constituent of this fauna 6 The Dinosaur Park Formation is interpreted as a low relief setting of rivers and floodplains that became more swampy and influenced by marine conditions over time as the Western Interior Seaway transgressed westward 6 The climate was warmer than present day Alberta without frost but with wetter and drier seasons Conifers were apparently the dominant canopy plants with an understory of ferns tree ferns and angiosperms 6 Some of the less common hadrosaurs in the Dinosaur Park Formation of Dinosaur Provincial Park such as Parasaurolophus may represent the remains of individuals who died while migrating through the region They might also have had a more upland habitat where they may have nested or fed The presence of Parasaurolophus and Kritosaurus in northern latitude fossil sites may represent faunal exchange between otherwise distinct northern and southern biomes in Late Cretaceous North America Both taxa are uncommon outside of the southern biome where along with Pentaceratops they are predominate members of the fauna 48 New Mexico edit nbsp Teratophoneus attacking a P cyrtocristatus In the Fruitland Formation of New Mexico P cyrtocristatus shared its habitat with other ornithischians and theropods Specifically its contemporaries were the ceratopsian Pentaceratops sternbergii 8 the pachycephalosaur Stegoceras novomexicanum 49 and some unidentified fossils belonging to Tyrannosauridae Ornithomimus Troodontidae Saurornitholestes langstoni Struthiomimus Ornithopoda Chasmosaurus Corythosaurus Hadrosaurinae Hadrosauridae and Ceratopsidae 8 When Parasaurolophus existed the Fruitland Formation was swampy positioned in the lowlands and close to the shore of the Cretaceous Interior Seaway The lowermost part of the Fruitland Formation is just younger than 75 56 0 41 mya with the uppermost boundary dating to 74 55 0 22 mya 50 Existing slightly later than the species from the Fruitland Formation P tubicen is also found in New Mexico in the Kirtland Formation 8 Numerous vertebrate groups are from this formation including fishes crurotarsans 50 ornithischians saurischians 8 pterosaurs 51 and turtles The fishes are represented by the two species Melvius chauliodous and Myledalphus bipartitus The crurotarsans include Brachychampsa montana and Denazinosuchus kirtlandicus 50 Ornithischians from the formation are represented by the hadrosaurids Anasazisaurus horneri Naashoibitosaurus ostromi Kritosaurus navajovius and P tubicen the ankylosaurids Ahshislepelta minor and Nodocephalosaurus kirtlandensis the ceratopsians Pentaceratops sternbergii 8 and Titanoceratops ouranos 52 and the pachycephalosaurs Stegoceras novomexicanum 49 and Sphaerotholus goodwini 50 Saurischians include the tyrannosaurid Bistahieversor sealeyi 53 the ornithomimid Ornithomimus sp 8 and the troodontid Saurornitholestes robustus 54 One pterosaur is known named Navajodactylus boerei 51 Turtles are fairly plentiful and are known from Denazinemys nodosa Basilemys nobilis Neurankylus baueri Plastomenus robustus and Thescelus hemispherica Unidentified taxa are known including the crurotarsan Leidyosuchus 50 and the theropods Struthiomimus Troodontidae and Tyrannosauridae 8 The beginning of the Kirtland Formation dates to 74 55 0 22 mya with the formation ending at around 73 05 0 25 mya 50 Utah edit nbsp nbsp Skull from the Kaiparowits Formation tentatively assigned to P cyrtocristatus Argon argon radiometric dating indicates that the Kaiparowits Formation was deposited between 76 6 and 74 5 million years ago during the Campanian age of the Late Cretaceous period 55 56 During the Late Cretaceous period the site of the Kaiparowits Formation was located near the western shore of the Western Interior Seaway a large inland sea that split North America into two landmasses Laramidia to the west and Appalachia to the east The plateau where dinosaurs lived was an ancient floodplain dominated by large channels and abundant wetland peat swamps ponds and lakes and was bordered by highlands The climate was wet and humid and supported an abundant and diverse range of organisms 57 This formation contains one of the best and most continuous records of Late Cretaceous terrestrial life in the world 58 Parasaurolophus shared its paleoenvironment with other dinosaurs such as dromaeosaurid theropods the troodontid Talos sampsoni ornithomimids like Ornithomimus velox tyrannosaurids like Teratophoneus armored ankylosaurids the duckbilled hadrosaur Gryposaurus monumentensis the ceratopsians Utahceratops gettyi Nasutoceratops titusi and Kosmoceratops richardsoni and the oviraptorosaurian Hagryphus giganteus 59 Paleofauna present in the Kaiparowits Formation included chondrichthyans sharks and rays frogs salamanders turtles lizards and crocodilians like the apex predator Deinosuchus A variety of early mammals were present including multituberculates marsupials and insectivorans 60 See also editTimeline of hadrosaur researchReferences editFootnotes edit Martin 2014 Colbert Edwin H Edwin Harris Knight Charles Robert 1951 The dinosaur book the ruling reptiles and their relatives New York McGraw Hill p 152 a b c d e Evans et al 2009 Liddell amp Scott 1980 a b c d e f g Parks 1922 a b c d e Currie amp Koppelhus 2005 a b c d e f Evans amp Reisz 2007 a b c d e f g h i j k Weishampel et al 2004 a b c d e f g h i j Sullivan amp Williamson 1999 a b Wiman 1931 a b Simpson 1979 a b c d e Williamson 2000 a b c Ostrom 1961 a b Weishampel amp Jensen 1979 a b c d e f Hone et al 2011 a b c d Benson et al 2012 a b c d Horner et al 2004 Sullivan et al 2011 a b c d e f Weishampel 1981 a b c d Hopson 1975 Xing et al 2014 a b c d e Farke et al 2013 Seebacher F 2001 A new method to calculate allometric length mass relationships of dinosaurs PDF Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 21 1 51 60 doi 10 1671 0272 4634 2001 021 0051 ANMTCA 2 0 CO 2 JSTOR 4524171 S2CID 53446536 Paul Gregory S 2016 The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs Princeton University Press p 341 ISBN 978 1 78684 190 2 OCLC 985402380 a b c d Lull amp Wright 1942 Brett Surman amp Wagner 2006 Gilmore 1924 Godefroit et al 2000 Bakker 1986 Joe the Dinosaur Raymond Alf Museum Retrieved March 31 2021 a b c Glut 1997 a b c Norman 1985 a b c d Evans 2006 Romer 1933 Wilfarth 1947 Sternberg 1935 Colbert 1945 a b Manucci F Dempsey M Tanke D H et al Description and etiology of paleopathological lesions in the type specimen of Parasaurolophus walkeri Dinosauria Hadrosauridae with proposed reconstructions of the nuchal ligament J Anat 2020 00 1 15 https doi org 10 1111 joa 13363 Abel 1924 a b Maryanska amp Osmolska 1979 a b Ostrom 1962 Sullivan amp Williamson 1996 Wheeler 1978 a b c Weishampel 1997 Sandia 1997 Diegert amp Williamson 1998 Bertozzo Filippo Manucci Fabio Dempsey Matthew Tanke Darren H Evans David C Ruffell Alastair Murphy Eileen 2020 Description and etiology of paleopathological lesions in the type specimen of Parasaurolophus walkeri Dinosauria Hadrosauridae with proposed reconstructions of the nuchal ligament Journal of Anatomy 238 5 1055 1069 doi 10 1111 joa 13363 PMC 8053592 PMID 33289113 Tanke amp Carpenter 2001 a b Jasinski amp Sullivan 2011 a b c d e f Sullivan amp Lucas 2006 a b Sullivan amp Fowler 2011 Longrich 2011 Carr amp Williamson 2010 Evans et al 2014 Roberts et al 2005 Eaton 2002 Titus amp Loewen 2013 Clinton 1996 Zanno amp Sampson 2005 Eaton et al 1999 Citations edit Abel Othenio 1924 Die neuen Dinosaurierfunde in der Oberkreide Canadas Jahrbuch Naturwissenschaften in German 12 36 709 716 Bibcode 1924NW 12 709A doi 10 1007 BF01504818 S2CID 1133858 Bakker R T 1986 The Dinosaur Heresies New Theories Unlocking the Mysteries of Dinosaurs and their Extinction William Morrow p 194 ISBN 978 0 8217 2859 8 Benson R J Brussatte S J Anderson Hone D Parsons K Xu X Milner D Naish D 2012 Prehistoric Life Dorling Kindersley p 342 ISBN 978 0 7566 9910 9 Brett Surman Michael K Wagner Jonathan R 2006 Appendicular anatomy in Campanian and Maastrichtian North American hadrosaurids In Carpenter Kenneth ed Horns and Beaks Ceratopsian and Ornithopod Dinosaurs Bloomington and Indianapolis Indiana University Press pp 135 169 ISBN 978 0 253 34817 3 Carr T D Williamson T E 2010 Bistahieversor sealeyi gen et sp nov a new tyrannosauroid from New Mexico and the origin of deep snouts in Tyrannosauroidea Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 30 1 1 16 Bibcode 2010JVPal 30 1C doi 10 1080 02724630903413032 S2CID 54029279 Colbert Edwin H 1945 The Dinosaur Book The Ruling Reptiles and their Relatives New York American Museum of Natural History Man and Nature Publications 14 p 156 OCLC 691246 Diegert C F Williamson T E 1998 A digital acoustic model of the lambeosaurine hadrosaur Parasaurolophus tubicen Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 18 3 38A doi 10 1080 02724634 1998 10011116 Currie Phillip J Koppelhus Eva eds 2005 Dinosaur Provincial Park A Spectacular Ancient Ecosystem Revealed Bloomington Indiana University Press pp 312 348 ISBN 978 0 253 34595 0 Clinton William Presidential Proclamation Establishment of the Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument September 18 1996 Archived from the original on August 28 2013 Retrieved November 9 2013 Eaton J G 2002 Multituberculate mammals from the Wahweap Campanian Aquilan and Kaiparowits Campanian Judithian formations within and near Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument southern Utah Miscellaneous Publication 02 4 UtahGeological Survey 1 66 Eaton J G Cifelli R L Hutchinson J H Kirkland J I Parrish M J 1999 Cretaceous vertebrate faunas from the Kaiparowits Plateau south central Utah In Gillete David D ed Vertebrate Paleontology in Utah Miscellaneous Publication 99 1 Salt Lake City Utah Geological Survey pp 345 353 ISBN 978 1 55791 634 1 Evans D C 2006 Nasal cavity homologies and cranial crest function in lambeosaurine dinosaurs Paleobiology 32 1 109 125 Bibcode 2006Pbio 32 109E doi 10 1666 04027 1 S2CID 198152630 Evans D C Reisz R R 2007 Anatomy and Relationships of Lambeosaurus magnicristatus a crested hadrosaurid dinosaur Ornithischia from the Dinosaur Park Formation Alberta Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 27 2 373 393 doi 10 1671 0272 4634 2007 27 373 AAROLM 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 86070917 Evans D C Bavington R Campione N E 2009 An unusual hadrosaurid braincase from the Dinosaur Park Formation and the biostratigraphy of Parasaurolophus Ornithischia Lambeosaurinae from southern Alberta Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 46 11 791 800 Bibcode 2009CaJES 46 791E doi 10 1139 E09 050 Evans D C Larson D W Cullen T M Sullivan R M 2014 Sues Hans Dieter ed Saurornitholestes robustus is a troodontid Dinosauria Theropoda Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 51 7 730 734 Bibcode 2014CaJES 51 730E doi 10 1139 cjes 2014 0073 Farke A A Chok D J Herrero A Scolieri B Werning S 2013 Hutchinson John ed Ontogeny in the tube crested dinosaur Parasaurolophus Hadrosauridae and heterochrony in hadrosaurids PeerJ 1 e182 doi 10 7717 peerj 182 PMC 3807589 PMID 24167777 Gilmore Charles W 1924 On the genus Stephanosaurus with a description of the type specimen of Lambeosaurus lambei Parks Canada Department of Mines Geological Survey Bulletin Geological Series 38 43 29 48 Glut D F 1997 Parasaurolophus In Glut Donald F ed Dinosaurs The Encyclopedia McFarland amp Company pp 678 940 ISBN 978 0 899 50917 4 Godefroit Pascal Shuqin Zan Liyong Jin 2000 Charonosaurus jiayinensis n g n sp a lambeosaurine dinosaur from the Late Maastrichtian of northeastern China PDF Comptes Rendus de l Academie des Sciences Serie IIA 330 12 875 882 Bibcode 2000CRASE 330 875G doi 10 1016 S1251 8050 00 00214 7 Hone D W E Naish D Cuthill I C 2011 Does mutual sexual selection explain the evolution of head crests in pterosaurs and dinosaurs PDF Lethaia 45 2 139 156 doi 10 1111 j 1502 3931 2011 00300 x Archived from the original PDF on October 6 2014 Hopson J A 1975 The Evolution of Cranial Display Structures in Hadrosaurid Dinosaurs Paleobiology 1 1 21 43 Bibcode 1975Pbio 1 21H doi 10 1017 S0094837300002165 JSTOR 2400327 S2CID 88689241 Horner J A Weishampel D B Forster C A 2004 Hadrosauridae In Weishampel David B Osmolska Halszka Dodson Peter eds The Dinosauria Second ed University of California Press pp 438 463 ISBN 978 0 520 24209 8 Jasinski S E Sullivan R M 2011 Re evaluation of pachycephalosaurids from the Fruitland Kirtland transition Kirtlandian late Campanian San Juan Basin New Mexico with a description of a new species of Stegoceras and a reassessment of Texascephale langstoni New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin Fossil Record 3 53 202 215 Liddell Henry George and Robert Scott 1980 A Greek English Lexicon Abridged ed United Kingdom Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 910207 5 Longrich N R 2011 Titanoceratops ouranous a giant horned dinosaur from the Late Campanian of New Mexico PDF Cretaceous Research 32 3 264 276 Bibcode 2011CrRes 32 264L doi 10 1016 j cretres 2010 12 007 Lull R S Wright N E 1942 Hadrosaurian Dinosaurs of North America Geological Society of America Special Paper 40 Geological Society of America p 229 Martin A J 2014 Dinosaurs Without Bones Dinosaur Lives Revealed by Their Trace Fossils Pegasus Books p 42 ISBN 978 1 60598 499 5 Maryanska T Osmolska H 1979 Aspects of hadrosaurian cranial anatomy Lethaia 12 3 265 273 Bibcode 1979Letha 12 265M doi 10 1111 j 1502 3931 1979 tb01006 x Norman David B 1985 Hadrosaurids II The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs An Original and Compelling Insight into Life in the Dinosaur Kingdom New York Crescent Books pp 122 127 ISBN 978 0 517 46890 6 Ostrom J H 1961 A New Species of Hadrosaurian Dinosaur from the Cretaceous of New Mexico Journal of Paleontology 35 3 575 577 JSTOR 1301139 Ostrom John H 1962 The cranial crests of hadrosaurian dinosaurs Postilla 62 1 29 Parks W A 1922 Parasaurolophus walkeri a new genus and species of trachodont dinosaur University of Toronto Studies Geological Series 13 5 32 Roberts E M Deino A L Chan M A 2005 40Ar 39Ar age of the Kaiparowits Formation southern Utah and correlation of contemporaneous Campanian strata and vertebrate faunas along the margin of the Western Interior Basin Cretaceous Research 26 2 307 318 doi 10 1016 j cretres 2005 01 002 Romer Alfred Sherwood 1933 Vertebrate Paleontology University of Chicago Press p 491 OCLC 1186563 Sandia National Laboratories December 5 1997 Scientists Use Digital Paleontology to Produce Voice of Parasaurolophus Dinosaur Sandia National Laboratories Archived from the original on August 17 2014 Simpson D P 1979 Cassell s Latin Dictionary 5 ed London Cassell Ltd p 883 ISBN 978 0 304 52257 6 Sternberg Charles M 1935 Hooded hadrosaurs of the Belly River Series of the Upper Cretaceous Canada Department of Mines Bulletin Geological Series 77 52 1 37 Sullivan R S Williamson T E 1996 A new skull of Parasaurolophus long crested form from New Mexico external and internal CT scans features and their functional implications Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 16 3 1 68 doi 10 1080 02724634 1996 10011371 Sullivan R S Williamson T E 1999 A new skull of Parasaurolophus Dinosauria Hadrosauridae from the Kirtland Formation of New Mexico and a revision of the genus PDF New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 15 1 52 Archived from the original PDF on April 8 2023 Sullivan R M Lucas S G 2006 The Kirtlandian Land Vertebrate Age Faunal Composition Temporal Position and Biostratigraphic Correlation in the Nonmarine Upper Cretaceous of Western North America In Lucas S G Sullivan R M eds Late Cretaceous vertebrates from the Western Interior Vol 35 pp 7 23 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Sullivan R S Jasinski S E Guenther M Lucas S G 2011 Sullivan Robert S Lucas Spencer G eds Fossil Record 3 The first lambeosaurin Dinosauria Hadrosauridae Lambeosaurinae from the Upper Cretaceous Ojo Alamo Formation Naashoibito Member San Juan Basin New Mexico PDF New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 53 405 417 Archived from the original PDF on October 6 2014 Sullivan R M Fowler D W 2011 Navajodactylus boerei n gen n sp Pterosauria Azhdarchidae from the Upper Cretaceous Kirtland Formation upper Campanian of New Mexico PDF Fossil Record 3 New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 53 393 404 Tanke D H Carpenter K eds 2001 Mesozoic Vertebrate Life Indiana University Press pp 206 328 ISBN 978 0 253 33907 2 Titus A L Loewen M A eds 2013 At the Top of the Grand Staircase The Late Cretaceous of Southern Utah Indiana University Press pp 1 634 Weishampel D B Jensen J A 1979 Parasaurolophus Reptilia Hadrosauridae from Utah Journal of Paleontology 53 6 1422 1427 JSTOR 1304144 Weishampel D B 1981 Acoustic Analysis of Vocalization of Lambeosaurine Dinosaurs Reptilia Ornithischia PDF Paleobiology 7 2 252 261 Bibcode 1981Pbio 7 252W doi 10 1017 S0094837300004036 JSTOR 2400478 S2CID 89109302 Archived from the original PDF on October 6 2014 Weishampel D B 1997 Dinosaurian Cacophony Inferring function in extinct organisms BioScience 47 3 150 155 doi 10 2307 1313034 JSTOR 1313034 Weishampel David B Barrett Paul M Coria Rodolfo A Le Loeuff Jean Xu Xing Zhao Xijin Sahni Ashok Gomani Elizabeth M P Noto Christopher R 2004 Dinosaur Distribution The Dinosauria 2nd ed pp 517 606 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Wheeler P E 1978 Elaborate CNS cooling structure in large dinosaurs Nature 275 5679 441 443 Bibcode 1978Natur 275 441W doi 10 1038 275441a0 PMID 692723 S2CID 4160470 Wilfarth Martin 1947 Russeltragende Dinosaurier Orion Munich in German 2 525 532 Williamson T E 2000 Lucas Spencer G Heckert Andrew B eds Dinosaurs of New Mexico Review of Hadrosauridae Dinosauria Ornithischia from the San Juan Basin New Mexico New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 17 191 213 Wiman C 1931 Parasaurolophus tubicen n sp aus der Kreide in New Mexico Nova Acta Regiae Societatis Scientiarum Upsaliensis Series 4 in German 7 5 1 11 Xing H Wang D Han F Sullivan C Ma Q He Y Hone D W E Yan R Du F Xu X 2014 Evans David C ed New Basal Hadrosauroid Dinosaur Dinosauria Ornithopoda with Transitional Features from the Late Cretaceous of Henan Province China PLOS ONE 9 6 e98821 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 998821X doi 10 1371 journal pone 0098821 PMC 4047018 PMID 24901454 Zanno L E Sampson S D 2005 A new oviraptorosaur Theropoda Maniraptora from the Late Cretaceous Campanian of Utah Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 25 4 897 904 doi 10 1671 0272 4634 2005 025 0897 ANOTMF 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 131302174 External links editStrauss Bob 2014 Ten Facts About Parasaurolophus About Com Dinosaurs Archived from the original on April 7 2015 Retrieved October 5 2014 Parasaurolophus sound Sandia National Laboratories December 5 1997 Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Hartman Scott 2004 Ornithischians Parasaurolophus cyrtocristatus Scott Hartman s Skeletal Drawing Hartman Scott 2013 Ornithischians Parasaurolophus walkeri Scott Hartman s Skeletal Drawing nbsp Media related to Parasaurolophus at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Parasaurolophus at Wikispecies Portals nbsp Dinosaurs nbsp Canada nbsp United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parasaurolophus amp oldid 1224586477, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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