fbpx
Wikipedia

Timeline of troodontid research

This timeline of troodontid research is a chronological listing of events in the history of paleontology focused on the troodontids, a group of bird-like theropod dinosaurs including animals like Troodon. Troodontid remains were among the first dinosaur fossils to be reported from North America after paleontologists began performing research on the continent, specifically the genus Troodon itself.[1] Since the type specimen of this genus was only a tooth and Troodon teeth are unusually similar to those of the unrelated thick-headed pachycephalosaurs, Troodon and its relatives would be embroiled in taxonomic confusion for over a century. Troodon was finally recognized as distinct from the pachycephalosaurs by Phil Currie in 1987. By that time many other species now recognized as troodontid had been discovered but had been classified in the family Saurornithoididae. Since these families were the same but the Troodontidae named first, it carries scientific legitimacy.[2]

Artistic restoration of Byronosaurus with secretary bird-like plumage

Many milestones of troodontid research occurred between the description of Troodon and the resolution of their confusion with pachycephalosaurs. The family itself was named by Charles Whitney Gilmore in 1924.[2] That same year Henry Fairfield Osborn named the genus Saurornithoides.[3] In the 1960s and 1970s researchers like Russell and Hopson observed that troodontids had very large brains for their body size. Both attributed this enlargement of the brain to a need for processing the animal's especially sharp senses.[4] Also in the 1970s, Barsbold described the new species Saurornithoides (now Zanabazar) junior[3] and named the family Saurornithoidae, but as noted this was just a junior synonym of the Troodontidae in the first place.[2]

In the 1980s Gauthier classed them with the dromaeosaurids in the Deinonychosauria.[2] That same decade Jack Horner reported the discovery of Troodon nests in Montana.[5] Interest in the life history of Troodon continued in the 1990s with a study of its growth rates based on histological sections of fossils taken from a bonebed in Montana[4] and the apparent pairing of eggs in Troodon nests.[5] This decade also saw the first potential report of European troodontid remains, although this claim has been controversial.[4] A single mysterious tooth from the Late Jurassic Morrison Formation of the United States was described as the oldest known troodontid remains, although this has also been controversial.[2] In the 2000s, several new kinds of troodontid were named, like Byronosaurus and Sinovenator.[3]

19th century edit

 
The Troodon formosus holotype tooth

1850s edit

1856

1870s edit

 
Paronychodon teeth

1876

1877

  • Cope became the first to identify Troodon as a theropod dinosaur rather than a lizard.[7]

20th century edit

 
Holotype skull of Saurornithoides

1900s edit

1901

1910s edit

1913

1920s edit

1924

1930s edit

 
Partial Stenonychosaurus inequalis skull, now attributed to Latenivenatrix

1932

1940s edit

1945

1960s edit

1964

1969

  • Russell noted the large brain to body size ratio in troodontids and hypothesized that this relatively high level of brain power was used to process its sharpened senses.[4]

1970s edit

 
Artist's restoration of Saurornithoides (now Zanabazar) junior

1974

1975

1977

  • James Hopson noted the large brain to body size ratio in troodontids and hypothesized that this relatively high level of brain power was used to process its sharpened senses.[4]

1980s edit

 
The feet of Borogovia

1982

1985

1986

 
Troodontids were formally distinguished from pachycephalosaurs in the 1980s.

1987

  • James H. Madsen described the new genus and species Borogovia gracilicrus.[3]
  • Currie noted traits in the teeth of Troodon that distinguished them from those of pachycephalosaurs. He split the Troodontidae off from the latter group and noted that the family Saurornithoididae, which then classified many dinosaurs now considered troodontids, was actually it junior synonym.[2]
  • Rinchen Barsbold and others described a new genus the early Cenomanian Khamareen Us site in Mongolia, however he decided not to name it because the specimen was so incomplete.[12]

1990s edit

 
Two Paronychodon teeth

1990

  • Osmólska and Barsbold reported possible troodontid remains from Europe, although without substantial evidentiary support.[2] They also published the first evolutionary tree of the Troodontids, based on changes in proportions of the second phalanx in the second toe rather than a standard cladistic character matrix. They found Troodon formosus to be the sister taxon to the genus Saurornithoides and Borogovia.[12]
  • Barsbold and Osmólska disputed the idea that troodontids used the large claw on their second toe in hunting large prey because it was smaller than the equivalent claw in dromaeosaurids.[4]
  • Currie and others proposed that Paronychodon teeth were not the remains of a distinct species but were actually injured, diseased, or deformed teeth belonging to many different species.[13]
 
Limb bones of Tochisaurus

1991

 
Artistic restoration of Sinornithoides youngi

1993

  • Russell and Dong Zhiming described the new genus and species Sinornithoides youngi.[3] They found troodontids to be the sister group of a clade containing the oviraptorosaurs and therizinosaurs.[2]
  • Stafford Howse and Andrew Milner reported possible troodontid remains from Europe, although without substantial evidentiary support.[2]
  • David Varricchio studied the remains of many Troodon formosus preserved in a bonebed. The co-occurrence of so many individuals of the same species preserved together suggested to him that this species may have been a social animal. Varrichio also studied histological sections of bones taken from individuals preserved in this bonebed at varying stages of growth. He found that it took less than five years for a hatchling Troodon to reach adult size, at which point it stopped growing.[4]

1994

  • Daniel Chure described the new genus and species Koparion douglassi.[6] This Late Jurassic taxon may be the oldest known troodontid, but since the type specimen consisted only of a single tooth it is impossible to know for sure if it is actually a troodontid.[2]
  • Thomas Richard Holtz Jr found troodontids to be the sister group to the ornithomimosaurs in the Bullatosauria.[2]
  • Holtz and others noted similarities in the teeth of troodontids and iguanine lizards and suggested that the former family may not have been strict carnivores.[4]

1995

 
Troodon eggs continued to attract scholarly attention in the 1990s.

1996

  • Darla Zelenitsky and Leonard Hills described the eggs of Troodon formosus. They found that the surface of Troodon eggs were smooth and their pores occurred singly or in pairs. When viewed in thin section, the eggshell exhibited two distinct layers. The inner layer was composed of blocky calcite crystals while crystals composing the outer layer were prismatic. Similar eggs in the past had been attributed to primitive ornithopods and relatives of Protoceratops but were actually laid by theropods.[5]

1997

  • Paul Callistus Sereno classified troodontids as deinonychosaurs.[2]
  • Richard Ciffeli and others reported possible troodontid teeth from a Cenomanian-aged microvertebrate fossil site in Utah. The teeth are similar to those referred to the controversial genus Paronychodon. If these fossils really are troodontid, they might well be the oldest known occurrence of the family in North America.[13]
  • Varricchio and others published a detailed study of troodontid nests from Montana. The eggs were laid in a tight circular formation with the narrow end pointed down. Although the eggs were at least partially covered by sediment the nest itself was basically open. Since one nest preserved a partial adult skeleton, the researchers concluded that these troodontids may have brooded their eggs like modern birds. The researchers also subjected the positions of individual eggs to statistical analysis and found that the eggs seemed to cluster in pairs. This is evidence that these dinosaurs had two functioning oviducts. Varrichio and the other researchers also noted that the ratio between the size of the egg and the body of the mother in these troodontids were between those of modern crocodiles and birds.[5]

1998

 
In the 1990s, Thomas Holtz argued that troodontids were close relatives of the ornithomimosaurs (example pictured), although this is no longer widely accepted.
  • Peter Makovicky and Hans-Dieter Sues classified troodontids as deinonychosaurs.[2]
  • Holtz and others noted similarities in the teeth of troodontids and iguanine lizards and suggested that the former family may not have been strict carnivores.[4]
  • Holtz found that troodontids were the sister group to the ornithomimosaurs.[2]
  • Catherine Forster and others found that troodontids were the sister group of the avialans.[2]
  • Sereno defined the Troodontidae as all taxa more closely related to Troodon formosus than to Velociraptor mongoliensis.[14]

1999

  • Fernando Emilio Novas and others reported a possible troodontid specimen from Coniacian to Turonian-aged sediments in South America. If this report is accurate it suggests that after first evolving in Asia, troodontids dispersed into North America and then traveled further down to South America.[13]
  • Sereno classified troodontids as deinonychosaurs.[2]

21st century edit

2000s edit

2000

  • Mark Norell, Makovicky and Clark described the new genus and species Byronosaurus jaffei.[3] They performed a cladistic analysis of the troodontids based on 38 characters in 10 taxa. Norell and others found troodontids to be the sister group of a clade containing the oviraptorosaurs and therizinosaurs. They found Byronosaurus to be the sister group of a polytomy consisting of the two Saurornithoides species from Asia and Troodon formosus of North America.[12] Sinornithoides was the sister group to this clade, with the unnamed Khamaryn Us troodontid being the sister group to all others.[15]
 
Sinovenator fossils
 
Illustration of Sinovenator with a human to scale

2001

  • Norell and others studied the evolutionary relationships between troodontids and other coelurosaurs. They found troodontids to be the sister group of a clade containing the oviraptorosaurs and therizinosaurs. Within Troodontidae they obtained similar results to their 2000 study, although this time they excluded the unnamed Khamaryn Us trodontid.[15]
  • Makovicky and Gerald Grellet-Tinner noted commonalities between the type of egg microstructure seen in troodontid eggs and those of modern neognathous birds. However, they also noted that these similarities may have evolved separately rather than being inherited from a shared common ancestor.[5]
  • Kevin Padian, Ji Qiang and Ji Shuan published a review of known feathered dinosaurs and their implications for the origin of flight.[16] The authors observed that many aspects of the distribution of feather homologues in the dinosaur family tree met the expectations of earlier phylogenetic hypotheses,[17] yet feathers were notably absent among troodontids despite the family's derived position within the coelurosaur family tree.[18]

2002

 
Artist's restoration of Mei
  • Xu Xing and others performed a cladistic analysis of the Dromaeosauridae.[19] They found the Troodontidae to be to sister taxon of the Dromaeosauridae.[19]
  • Xu and others described the new genus and species Sinovenator changii.[3] They performed a cladistic analysis of the troodontidae based on the same character matrix as Norell and others used back in 2001. Xu and the others recovered the same relationships among troodontids as the other researchers with the exception of Sinovenator's presence at the base of the tree. Since it was extremely primitive for a troodontid Sinovenator may offer insights into the family's relationships with other theropod groups.[20]

2004

2005

 
Artist's restoration of Anchiornis

2007

2009

2010s edit

 
Artist's restoration of Xixiasaurus

2010

2011

 
Artist's restoration of Gobivenator

2012

2014

2017

2019

2020

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Horner (2001); "History of Dinosaur Collecting in Montana", page 44.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Makovicky and Norell (2004); "Introduction", page 184.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Makovicky and Norell (2004); "Table 9.1: Troodontidae", page 185.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Makovicky and Norell (2004); "Paleobiology", page 194.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Makovicky and Norell (2004); "Paleobiology", page 195.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Makovicky and Norell (2004); "Table 9.1: Troodontidae", page 186.
  7. ^ Cope (1877).
  8. ^ Nopcsa (1901).
  9. ^ Kessler, Grigorescu, and Csiki (2005).
  10. ^ Sternberg (1945).
  11. ^ Holtz (2011); "Winter Appendix 2010".
  12. ^ a b c Makovicky and Norell (2004); "Systematics and Evolution", page 193.
  13. ^ a b c Makovicky and Norell (2004); "Biogeography", page 194.
  14. ^ Makovicky and Norell (2004); "Definition and Diagnosis", page 184.
  15. ^ a b Makovicky and Norell (2004); "Systematics and Evolution", pages 193–194.
  16. ^ Padian, Ji, and Ji (2001); "Abstract," page 117.
  17. ^ Padian, Ji, and Ji (2001); "Conclusions," pages 131–132.
  18. ^ Padian, Ji, and Ji (2001); "Conclusions," page 132.
  19. ^ a b Norell and Makovicky (2004); "Systematics and Evolution", page 207.
  20. ^ Makovicky and Norell (2004); "Systematics and Evolution", page 194.
  21. ^ Xu and Norell (2004); "Abstract," page 838.
  22. ^ Xu and Wang (2004); "Abstract," page 22.
  23. ^ Ji et al. (2005); "Abstract," page 197.
  24. ^ Averianov and Sues (2007); "Abstract," page 87.
  25. ^ Xu et al. (2009); "Abstract," page 430.
  26. ^ Norell et al. (2009); "Abstract," page 63.
  27. ^ Senter et al. (2010); "Abstract," page 1.
  28. ^ Lü et al. (2010); "Abstract," page 381.
  29. ^ Xu et al. (2011); "Abstract," page 1.
  30. ^ Zanno et al. (2011); "Abstract," page 1.
  31. ^ Xu et al. (2012); "Abstract," page 140.
  32. ^ Tsuihiji et al. (2014); "Abstract," page 131.
  33. ^ Varricchio, David J.; Kundrát, Martin; Hogan, Jason (2018). "An Intermediate Incubation Period and Primitive Brooding in a Theropod Dinosaur". Scientific Reports. 8 (1): 12454. Bibcode:2018NatSR...812454V. doi:10.1038/s41598-018-30085-6. PMC 6102251. PMID 30127534.
  34. ^ Hartman, Scott; Mortimer, Mickey; Wahl, William R.; Lomax, Dean R.; Lippincott, Jessica; Lovelace, David M. (2019). "A new paravian dinosaur from the Late Jurassic of North America supports a late acquisition of avian flight". PeerJ. 7: e7247. doi:10.7717/peerj.7247. PMC 6626525. PMID 31333906.

References edit

  • Averianov, A.O.; Sues, H.-D. (2007). "A new troodontid (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from the Cenomanian of Uzbekistan, with a review of troodontid records from the territories of the former Soviet Union". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 27 (1): 87–98. doi:10.1671/0272-4634(2007)27[87:ANTDTF]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 9743271.
  • Cope, Edward Drinker (1877). "Report on the geology of the region of the Judith River, Montana, and on vertebrate fossils obtained on or near the Missouri River". Bulletin of the United States Geological and Geographical Survey. 3 (3): 565–597.
  • Horner, John R. (2001). Dinosaurs Under the Big Sky. Mountain Press Publishing Company. ISBN 0-87842-445-8.
  • Holtz, Thomas R. (2011). "Winter 2010 Appendix" (PDF). Dinosaurs: The Most Complete, Up-to-Date Encyclopedia for Dinosaur Lovers of All Ages.
  • Ji, Q.; Ji, S.; Lu, J.; You, H.; Chen, W.; Liu, Y.; Liu, Y. (2005). "First avialan bird from China (Jinfengopteryx elegans gen. et sp. nov.)". Geological Bulletin of China. 24 (3): 197–205.
  • Junchang Lü; Li Xu; Yongqing Liu; Xingliao Zhang; Songhai Jia & Qiang Ji (2010). "A new troodontid (Theropoda: Troodontidae) from the Late Cretaceous of central China, and the radiation of Asian troodontids" (PDF). Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 55 (3): 381–388. doi:10.4202/app.2009.0047.
  • Kessler, E.; Grigorescu, D.; Csiki, Z. (2005). "Elopteryx revisited – a new bird-like specimen from the Maastrichtian of the Hateg Basin". Acta Palaeontologica Romaniae. 5: 249–258.
  • Mackovicky, Peter J.; Norell, Mark A. (2004). "Troodontidae". In Weishampel, David B.; Dodson, Peter; Osmólska, Halszka (eds.). The Dinosauria (2nd ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 184–195. ISBN 0-520-24209-2.
  • Nopcsa (1901). "Synopsis un Abstammung der Dinosaurier". Földtani Közlöny. Budapest. 31: 247–288.
  • Norell, M.A. & Makovicky, P.J. (2004). "Dromaeosauridae". In Weishampel, D.B.; Dodson, P. & Osmólska, H. (eds.). The Dinosauria (2nd ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 196–210. ISBN 0-520-24209-2.
  • Norell, M.A.; Makovicky, P.J.; Bever, G.S.; Balanoff, A.M.; Clark, J.M.; Barsbold, R.; Rowe, T. (2009). "A Review of the Mongolian Cretaceous Dinosaur Saurornithoides (Troodontidae: Theropoda)" (PDF). American Museum Novitates (3654): 63. doi:10.1206/648.1. hdl:2246/5973.
  • Padian, K.; Ji, Qiang; Ji, Shu-An (2001). "Feathered dinosaurs and origin of flight". In Tanke, D. H.; Carpenter, K. (eds.). Mesozoic Vertebrate Life. Life of the Past. Indiana University Press. pp. 117–135.
  • Phil Senter; James I. Kirkland; John Bird; Jeff A. Bartlett (2010). "A New Troodontid Theropod Dinosaur from the Lower Cretaceous of Utah". PLOS ONE. 5 (12): e14329. Bibcode:2010PLoSO...514329S. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0014329. PMC 3002269. PMID 21179513.
  • Sternberg, C.M. (1945). "Pachycephalosauridae proposed for domeheaded dinosaurs, Stegoceras lambei n. sp., described". Journal of Paleontology. 19: 534–538.
  • Tsuihiji, T.; Barsbold, R.; Watabe, M.; Tsogtbaatar, K.; Chinzorig, T.; Fujiyama, Y.; Suzuki, S. (2014). "An exquisitely preserved troodontid theropod with new information on the palatal structure from the Upper Cretaceous of Mongolia". Naturwissenschaften. 101 (2): 131–142. Bibcode:2014NW....101..131T. doi:10.1007/s00114-014-1143-9. PMID 24441791. S2CID 13920021.
  • Xing Xu & Mark A. Norell (2004). "A new troodontid dinosaur from China with avian-like sleeping posture" (PDF). Nature. 431 (7010): 838–841. Bibcode:2004Natur.431..838X. doi:10.1038/nature02898. PMID 15483610. S2CID 4362745.
  • Xu, X.; Wang, X.-L. (2004). "A New Troodontid (Theropoda: Troodontidae) from the Lower Cretaceous Yixian Formation of Western Liaoning, China". Acta Geologica Sinica. 78 (1): 22–26. doi:10.1111/j.1755-6724.2004.tb00671.x. S2CID 129952609.
  • Xu, X.; Zhao, Q.; Norell, M.; Sullivan, C.; Hone, D.; Erickson, G.; Wang, X.; Han, F. & Guo, Y. (2009). "A new feathered maniraptoran dinosaur fossil that fills a morphological gap in avian origin". Chinese Science Bulletin. 54 (3): 430–435. Bibcode:2009SciBu..54..430X. doi:10.1007/s11434-009-0009-6.
  • Xing Xu; Qingwei Tan; Corwin Sullivan; Fenglu Han; Dong Xiao (2011). "A Short-Armed Troodontid Dinosaur from the Upper Cretaceous of Inner Mongolia and Its Implications for Troodontid Evolution". PLOS ONE. 6 (9): e22916. Bibcode:2011PLoSO...622916X. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0022916. PMC 3168428. PMID 21915256.
  • Lindsay E. Zanno, David J. Varricchio, Patrick M. O'Connor, Alan L. Titus and Michael J. Knell (2011). "A new troodontid theropod, Talos sampsoni gen. et sp. nov., from the Upper Cretaceous Western Interior Basin of North America". PLOS ONE. 6 (9): e24487. Bibcode:2011PLoSO...624487Z. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0024487. PMC 3176273. PMID 21949721.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Xu Xing, Zhao Ji, Corwin Sullivan, Tan Qing-Wei, Martin Sander and Ma Qing-Yu (2012). "The taxonomy of the troodontid IVPP V 10597 reconsidered" (PDF). Vertebrata PalAsiatica. 50 (2): 140–150.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links edit

  •   Media related to Troodontidae at Wikimedia Commons

timeline, troodontid, research, this, timeline, troodontid, research, chronological, listing, events, history, paleontology, focused, troodontids, group, bird, like, theropod, dinosaurs, including, animals, like, troodon, troodontid, remains, were, among, firs. This timeline of troodontid research is a chronological listing of events in the history of paleontology focused on the troodontids a group of bird like theropod dinosaurs including animals like Troodon Troodontid remains were among the first dinosaur fossils to be reported from North America after paleontologists began performing research on the continent specifically the genus Troodon itself 1 Since the type specimen of this genus was only a tooth and Troodon teeth are unusually similar to those of the unrelated thick headed pachycephalosaurs Troodon and its relatives would be embroiled in taxonomic confusion for over a century Troodon was finally recognized as distinct from the pachycephalosaurs by Phil Currie in 1987 By that time many other species now recognized as troodontid had been discovered but had been classified in the family Saurornithoididae Since these families were the same but the Troodontidae named first it carries scientific legitimacy 2 Artistic restoration of Byronosaurus with secretary bird like plumageMany milestones of troodontid research occurred between the description of Troodon and the resolution of their confusion with pachycephalosaurs The family itself was named by Charles Whitney Gilmore in 1924 2 That same year Henry Fairfield Osborn named the genus Saurornithoides 3 In the 1960s and 1970s researchers like Russell and Hopson observed that troodontids had very large brains for their body size Both attributed this enlargement of the brain to a need for processing the animal s especially sharp senses 4 Also in the 1970s Barsbold described the new species Saurornithoides now Zanabazar junior 3 and named the family Saurornithoidae but as noted this was just a junior synonym of the Troodontidae in the first place 2 In the 1980s Gauthier classed them with the dromaeosaurids in the Deinonychosauria 2 That same decade Jack Horner reported the discovery of Troodon nests in Montana 5 Interest in the life history of Troodon continued in the 1990s with a study of its growth rates based on histological sections of fossils taken from a bonebed in Montana 4 and the apparent pairing of eggs in Troodon nests 5 This decade also saw the first potential report of European troodontid remains although this claim has been controversial 4 A single mysterious tooth from the Late Jurassic Morrison Formation of the United States was described as the oldest known troodontid remains although this has also been controversial 2 In the 2000s several new kinds of troodontid were named like Byronosaurus and Sinovenator 3 Contents 1 19th century 1 1 1850s 1 2 1870s 2 20th century 2 1 1900s 2 2 1910s 2 3 1920s 2 4 1930s 2 5 1940s 2 6 1960s 2 7 1970s 2 8 1980s 2 9 1990s 3 21st century 3 1 2000s 3 2 2010s 4 See also 5 Footnotes 6 References 7 External links19th century edit nbsp The Troodon formosus holotype tooth1850s edit 1856 Joseph Leidy described the new genus and species Troodon formosus based on an isolated tooth crown It was one of the first dinosaurs from North America to be formally named though it was believed to be a lizard until 1877 2 1870s edit nbsp Paronychodon teeth1876 Edward Drinker Cope described the new species Laelaps explanatus He also described the new genus and species Paronychodon lacustris 6 Cope described the new species Laelaps cristatus and L laevifrons He also described the new genus and species Zapsalis abradens 6 1877 Cope became the first to identify Troodon as a theropod dinosaur rather than a lizard 7 20th century edit nbsp Holotype skull of Saurornithoides1900s edit 1901 Franz Nopcsa von Felso Szilvas classified Troodon as a megalosaurid 8 1910s edit 1913 Roy Chapman Andrews described the new genus and species Elopteryx nopcsai 3 Initially thought to be a bone fragment from a bird it was later considered a troodontid but may in fact be an alvarezsaurid 9 1920s edit 1924 Henry Fairfield Osborn described the first troodontid known from more than teeth a reasonably complete skeleton and skull was placed in the new genus and species Saurornithoides mongoliensis 3 Charles Whitney Gilmore named the Troodontidae At the time the name mainly applied to taxa now considered to be pachycephalosaurs because the groups have vaguely similar teeth 2 1930s edit nbsp Partial Stenonychosaurus inequalis skull now attributed to Latenivenatrix1932 Gilmore described the new genus and species Polyodontosaurus grandis 3 C M Sternberg described the new genus and species Stenonychosaurus inequalis 3 1940s edit 1945 C M Sternberg proves that troodontids are theropods 10 1960s edit 1964 Estes synonymized Paronychodon with the mammal Tripriodon caperatus based on similar teeth though this was later shown to be an error 6 1969 Russell noted the large brain to body size ratio in troodontids and hypothesized that this relatively high level of brain power was used to process its sharpened senses 4 1970s edit nbsp Artist s restoration of Saurornithoides nowZanabazar junior1974 Rinchen Barsbold described the new species Saurornithoides junior 3 and named the Saurornithoididae 2 1975 Colin James Oliver Harrison and Cyril Alexander Walker described the new genus and species Bradycneme draculae 3 They also described the new genus and species Heptasteornis andrewsi 6 Both fragmentary fossils were at first identified as birds and later as troodontids though researchers currently classify them as alvarezsaurids 11 1977 James Hopson noted the large brain to body size ratio in troodontids and hypothesized that this relatively high level of brain power was used to process its sharpened senses 4 1980s edit nbsp The feet of Borogovia1982 Russell and Ronald Seguin interpreted troodontids as carnivores who ate small prey items like mammals dinosaur eggs and hatchlings as well as insects 4 Halszka Osmolska disputed the idea that troodontids used the large claw on their second toe in hunting large prey because it was smaller than the equivalent claw in dromaeosaurids 4 Horner reported troodontid nests from Montana 5 Kenneth Carpenter described the new genus and species Pectinodon bakkeri 3 1985 Lev Nesov described the new genus and species Pectinodon asiamericanus 6 Phil Currie hypothesized that troodontids basisphenoid bullae may have helped them hear very low frequency sounds 4 1986 nbsp Troodontids were formally distinguished from pachycephalosaurs in the 1980s Jacques Gauthier classified troodontids as deinonychosaurs 2 1987 James H Madsen described the new genus and species Borogovia gracilicrus 3 Currie noted traits in the teeth of Troodon that distinguished them from those of pachycephalosaurs He split the Troodontidae off from the latter group and noted that the family Saurornithoididae which then classified many dinosaurs now considered troodontids was actually it junior synonym 2 Rinchen Barsbold and others described a new genus the early Cenomanian Khamareen Us site in Mongolia however he decided not to name it because the specimen was so incomplete 12 1990s edit nbsp Two Paronychodon teeth1990 Osmolska and Barsbold reported possible troodontid remains from Europe although without substantial evidentiary support 2 They also published the first evolutionary tree of the Troodontids based on changes in proportions of the second phalanx in the second toe rather than a standard cladistic character matrix They found Troodon formosus to be the sister taxon to the genus Saurornithoides and Borogovia 12 Barsbold and Osmolska disputed the idea that troodontids used the large claw on their second toe in hunting large prey because it was smaller than the equivalent claw in dromaeosaurids 4 Currie and others proposed that Paronychodon teeth were not the remains of a distinct species but were actually injured diseased or deformed teeth belonging to many different species 13 nbsp Limb bones of Tochisaurus1991 Miguel Telles Antunes and Denise Sigogneau Russell described the new genus and species Euronychodon portucalensis 3 nbsp Artistic restoration of Sinornithoides youngiSergei Mikhailovich Kurzanov and Osmolska described the new genus and species Tochisaurus nemegtensis 3 1993 Russell and Dong Zhiming described the new genus and species Sinornithoides youngi 3 They found troodontids to be the sister group of a clade containing the oviraptorosaurs and therizinosaurs 2 Stafford Howse and Andrew Milner reported possible troodontid remains from Europe although without substantial evidentiary support 2 David Varricchio studied the remains of many Troodon formosus preserved in a bonebed The co occurrence of so many individuals of the same species preserved together suggested to him that this species may have been a social animal Varrichio also studied histological sections of bones taken from individuals preserved in this bonebed at varying stages of growth He found that it took less than five years for a hatchling Troodon to reach adult size at which point it stopped growing 4 1994 Daniel Chure described the new genus and species Koparion douglassi 6 This Late Jurassic taxon may be the oldest known troodontid but since the type specimen consisted only of a single tooth it is impossible to know for sure if it is actually a troodontid 2 Thomas Richard Holtz Jr found troodontids to be the sister group to the ornithomimosaurs in the Bullatosauria 2 Holtz and others noted similarities in the teeth of troodontids and iguanine lizards and suggested that the former family may not have been strict carnivores 4 1995 Nesov described the new species Euronychodon asiaticus 3 He also described the new species Troodon isfarensis 6 Nesov described the new species Troodon asiamericanus 6 nbsp Troodon eggs continued to attract scholarly attention in the 1990s 1996 Darla Zelenitsky and Leonard Hills described the eggs of Troodon formosus They found that the surface of Troodon eggs were smooth and their pores occurred singly or in pairs When viewed in thin section the eggshell exhibited two distinct layers The inner layer was composed of blocky calcite crystals while crystals composing the outer layer were prismatic Similar eggs in the past had been attributed to primitive ornithopods and relatives of Protoceratops but were actually laid by theropods 5 1997 Paul Callistus Sereno classified troodontids as deinonychosaurs 2 Richard Ciffeli and others reported possible troodontid teeth from a Cenomanian aged microvertebrate fossil site in Utah The teeth are similar to those referred to the controversial genus Paronychodon If these fossils really are troodontid they might well be the oldest known occurrence of the family in North America 13 Varricchio and others published a detailed study of troodontid nests from Montana The eggs were laid in a tight circular formation with the narrow end pointed down Although the eggs were at least partially covered by sediment the nest itself was basically open Since one nest preserved a partial adult skeleton the researchers concluded that these troodontids may have brooded their eggs like modern birds The researchers also subjected the positions of individual eggs to statistical analysis and found that the eggs seemed to cluster in pairs This is evidence that these dinosaurs had two functioning oviducts Varrichio and the other researchers also noted that the ratio between the size of the egg and the body of the mother in these troodontids were between those of modern crocodiles and birds 5 1998 nbsp In the 1990s Thomas Holtz argued that troodontids were close relatives of the ornithomimosaurs example pictured although this is no longer widely accepted Peter Makovicky and Hans Dieter Sues classified troodontids as deinonychosaurs 2 Holtz and others noted similarities in the teeth of troodontids and iguanine lizards and suggested that the former family may not have been strict carnivores 4 Holtz found that troodontids were the sister group to the ornithomimosaurs 2 Catherine Forster and others found that troodontids were the sister group of the avialans 2 Sereno defined the Troodontidae as all taxa more closely related to Troodon formosus than to Velociraptor mongoliensis 14 1999 Fernando Emilio Novas and others reported a possible troodontid specimen from Coniacian to Turonian aged sediments in South America If this report is accurate it suggests that after first evolving in Asia troodontids dispersed into North America and then traveled further down to South America 13 Sereno classified troodontids as deinonychosaurs 2 21st century edit2000s edit 2000 Mark Norell Makovicky and Clark described the new genus and species Byronosaurus jaffei 3 They performed a cladistic analysis of the troodontids based on 38 characters in 10 taxa Norell and others found troodontids to be the sister group of a clade containing the oviraptorosaurs and therizinosaurs They found Byronosaurus to be the sister group of a polytomy consisting of the two Saurornithoides species from Asia and Troodon formosus of North America 12 Sinornithoides was the sister group to this clade with the unnamed Khamaryn Us troodontid being the sister group to all others 15 nbsp Sinovenator fossils nbsp Illustration of Sinovenator with a human to scale2001 Norell and others studied the evolutionary relationships between troodontids and other coelurosaurs They found troodontids to be the sister group of a clade containing the oviraptorosaurs and therizinosaurs Within Troodontidae they obtained similar results to their 2000 study although this time they excluded the unnamed Khamaryn Us trodontid 15 Makovicky and Gerald Grellet Tinner noted commonalities between the type of egg microstructure seen in troodontid eggs and those of modern neognathous birds However they also noted that these similarities may have evolved separately rather than being inherited from a shared common ancestor 5 Kevin Padian Ji Qiang and Ji Shuan published a review of known feathered dinosaurs and their implications for the origin of flight 16 The authors observed that many aspects of the distribution of feather homologues in the dinosaur family tree met the expectations of earlier phylogenetic hypotheses 17 yet feathers were notably absent among troodontids despite the family s derived position within the coelurosaur family tree 18 2002 nbsp Artist s restoration of MeiXu Xing and others performed a cladistic analysis of the Dromaeosauridae 19 They found the Troodontidae to be to sister taxon of the Dromaeosauridae 19 Xu and others described the new genus and species Sinovenator changii 3 They performed a cladistic analysis of the troodontidae based on the same character matrix as Norell and others used back in 2001 Xu and the others recovered the same relationships among troodontids as the other researchers with the exception of Sinovenator s presence at the base of the tree Since it was extremely primitive for a troodontid Sinovenator may offer insights into the family s relationships with other theropod groups 20 2004 Xu and Norell described the new genus and species Mei long 21 Xu and Wang described the new genus and species Sinusonasus magnodens 22 2005 Ji and others described the new genus and species Jinfengopteryx elegans 23 nbsp Artist s restoration of Anchiornis2007 Averianov and Sues described the new genus and species Urbacodon itemirensis 24 2009 Xu and others described the new genus and species Anchiornis huxleyi 25 Norell and others described the new genus Zanabazar 26 2010s edit nbsp Artist s restoration of Xixiasaurus2010 Senter and others described the new genus and species Geminiraptor suarezarum 27 Lu Junchang and others described the new genus and species Xixiasaurus henanensis 28 2011 Xu and others described the new genus and species Linhevenator tani 29 nbsp Artist s restoration of GobivenatorZanno and others described the new genus and species Talos sampsoni 30 2012 Xu and others described the new genus and species Philovenator curriei 31 2014 Tsuihiji and others described the new genus and species Gobivenator mongoliensis 32 2017 Evans and others described the new genus and species Albertavenator curriei Pei and others described the new genus and species Almas ukhaa Shen and others described the new genus and species Daliansaurus liaoningensis Xu and others described the new genus and species Jianianhualong tengi van der Reest and Currie described the new genus and species Latenivenatrix mcmasterae Shen and others described the new genus and species Liaoningvenator curriei Troodon has a massive reassignment The reassignment stated that Stenonychosaurus and the newly created genus Latenivenatrix are valid and not part of T formosus This limits Troodon to one species with a range that is restricted to the Judith river formation However David J Varricchio disagreed with the reassessment 33 2019 Hartman and others described the new genus and species Hesperornithoides miessleri 34 2020 Remains of a troodontid from the Prince Creek Formation were reported but were not given a name or formally described See also editHistory of paleontology Timeline of paleontology Timeline of dromaeosaurid research Timeline of pachycephalosaur researchFootnotes edit Horner 2001 History of Dinosaur Collecting in Montana page 44 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Makovicky and Norell 2004 Introduction page 184 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Makovicky and Norell 2004 Table 9 1 Troodontidae page 185 a b c d e f g h i j k l Makovicky and Norell 2004 Paleobiology page 194 a b c d e f Makovicky and Norell 2004 Paleobiology page 195 a b c d e f g h Makovicky and Norell 2004 Table 9 1 Troodontidae page 186 Cope 1877 Nopcsa 1901 Kessler Grigorescu and Csiki 2005 Sternberg 1945 Holtz 2011 Winter Appendix 2010 a b c Makovicky and Norell 2004 Systematics and Evolution page 193 a b c Makovicky and Norell 2004 Biogeography page 194 Makovicky and Norell 2004 Definition and Diagnosis page 184 a b Makovicky and Norell 2004 Systematics and Evolution pages 193 194 Padian Ji and Ji 2001 Abstract page 117 Padian Ji and Ji 2001 Conclusions pages 131 132 Padian Ji and Ji 2001 Conclusions page 132 a b Norell and Makovicky 2004 Systematics and Evolution page 207 Makovicky and Norell 2004 Systematics and Evolution page 194 Xu and Norell 2004 Abstract page 838 Xu and Wang 2004 Abstract page 22 Ji et al 2005 Abstract page 197 Averianov and Sues 2007 Abstract page 87 Xu et al 2009 Abstract page 430 Norell et al 2009 Abstract page 63 Senter et al 2010 Abstract page 1 Lu et al 2010 Abstract page 381 Xu et al 2011 Abstract page 1 Zanno et al 2011 Abstract page 1 Xu et al 2012 Abstract page 140 Tsuihiji et al 2014 Abstract page 131 Varricchio David J Kundrat Martin Hogan Jason 2018 An Intermediate Incubation Period and Primitive Brooding in a Theropod Dinosaur Scientific Reports 8 1 12454 Bibcode 2018NatSR 812454V doi 10 1038 s41598 018 30085 6 PMC 6102251 PMID 30127534 Hartman Scott Mortimer Mickey Wahl William R Lomax Dean R Lippincott Jessica Lovelace David M 2019 A new paravian dinosaur from the Late Jurassic of North America supports a late acquisition of avian flight PeerJ 7 e7247 doi 10 7717 peerj 7247 PMC 6626525 PMID 31333906 References editAverianov A O Sues H D 2007 A new troodontid Dinosauria Theropoda from the Cenomanian of Uzbekistan with a review of troodontid records from the territories of the former Soviet Union Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 27 1 87 98 doi 10 1671 0272 4634 2007 27 87 ANTDTF 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 9743271 Cope Edward Drinker 1877 Report on the geology of the region of the Judith River Montana and on vertebrate fossils obtained on or near the Missouri River Bulletin of the United States Geological and Geographical Survey 3 3 565 597 Horner John R 2001 Dinosaurs Under the Big Sky Mountain Press Publishing Company ISBN 0 87842 445 8 Holtz Thomas R 2011 Winter 2010 Appendix PDF Dinosaurs The Most Complete Up to Date Encyclopedia for Dinosaur Lovers of All Ages Ji Q Ji S Lu J You H Chen W Liu Y Liu Y 2005 First avialan bird from China Jinfengopteryx elegans gen et sp nov Geological Bulletin of China 24 3 197 205 Junchang Lu Li Xu Yongqing Liu Xingliao Zhang Songhai Jia amp Qiang Ji 2010 A new troodontid Theropoda Troodontidae from the Late Cretaceous of central China and the radiation of Asian troodontids PDF Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 55 3 381 388 doi 10 4202 app 2009 0047 Kessler E Grigorescu D Csiki Z 2005 Elopteryx revisited a new bird like specimen from the Maastrichtian of the Hateg Basin Acta Palaeontologica Romaniae 5 249 258 Mackovicky Peter J Norell Mark A 2004 Troodontidae In Weishampel David B Dodson Peter Osmolska Halszka eds The Dinosauria 2nd ed Berkeley University of California Press pp 184 195 ISBN 0 520 24209 2 Nopcsa 1901 Synopsis un Abstammung der Dinosaurier Foldtani Kozlony Budapest 31 247 288 Norell M A amp Makovicky P J 2004 Dromaeosauridae In Weishampel D B Dodson P amp Osmolska H eds The Dinosauria 2nd ed Berkeley University of California Press pp 196 210 ISBN 0 520 24209 2 Norell M A Makovicky P J Bever G S Balanoff A M Clark J M Barsbold R Rowe T 2009 A Review of the Mongolian Cretaceous Dinosaur Saurornithoides Troodontidae Theropoda PDF American Museum Novitates 3654 63 doi 10 1206 648 1 hdl 2246 5973 Padian K Ji Qiang Ji Shu An 2001 Feathered dinosaurs and origin of flight In Tanke D H Carpenter K eds Mesozoic Vertebrate Life Life of the Past Indiana University Press pp 117 135 Phil Senter James I Kirkland John Bird Jeff A Bartlett 2010 A New Troodontid Theropod Dinosaur from the Lower Cretaceous of Utah PLOS ONE 5 12 e14329 Bibcode 2010PLoSO 514329S doi 10 1371 journal pone 0014329 PMC 3002269 PMID 21179513 Sternberg C M 1945 Pachycephalosauridae proposed for domeheaded dinosaurs Stegoceras lambei n sp described Journal of Paleontology 19 534 538 Tsuihiji T Barsbold R Watabe M Tsogtbaatar K Chinzorig T Fujiyama Y Suzuki S 2014 An exquisitely preserved troodontid theropod with new information on the palatal structure from the Upper Cretaceous of Mongolia Naturwissenschaften 101 2 131 142 Bibcode 2014NW 101 131T doi 10 1007 s00114 014 1143 9 PMID 24441791 S2CID 13920021 Xing Xu amp Mark A Norell 2004 A new troodontid dinosaur from China with avian like sleeping posture PDF Nature 431 7010 838 841 Bibcode 2004Natur 431 838X doi 10 1038 nature02898 PMID 15483610 S2CID 4362745 Xu X Wang X L 2004 A New Troodontid Theropoda Troodontidae from the Lower Cretaceous Yixian Formation of Western Liaoning China Acta Geologica Sinica 78 1 22 26 doi 10 1111 j 1755 6724 2004 tb00671 x S2CID 129952609 Xu X Zhao Q Norell M Sullivan C Hone D Erickson G Wang X Han F amp Guo Y 2009 A new feathered maniraptoran dinosaur fossil that fills a morphological gap in avian origin Chinese Science Bulletin 54 3 430 435 Bibcode 2009SciBu 54 430X doi 10 1007 s11434 009 0009 6 Xing Xu Qingwei Tan Corwin Sullivan Fenglu Han Dong Xiao 2011 A Short Armed Troodontid Dinosaur from the Upper Cretaceous of Inner Mongolia and Its Implications for Troodontid Evolution PLOS ONE 6 9 e22916 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 622916X doi 10 1371 journal pone 0022916 PMC 3168428 PMID 21915256 Lindsay E Zanno David J Varricchio Patrick M O Connor Alan L Titus and Michael J Knell 2011 A new troodontid theropod Talos sampsoni gen et sp nov from the Upper Cretaceous Western Interior Basin of North America PLOS ONE 6 9 e24487 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 624487Z doi 10 1371 journal pone 0024487 PMC 3176273 PMID 21949721 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Xu Xing Zhao Ji Corwin Sullivan Tan Qing Wei Martin Sander and Ma Qing Yu 2012 The taxonomy of the troodontid IVPP V 10597 reconsidered PDF Vertebrata PalAsiatica 50 2 140 150 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link External links edit nbsp Media related to Troodontidae at Wikimedia CommonsPortals nbsp Dinosaurs nbsp Paleontology nbsp History of science nbsp Cretaceous nbsp Mesozoic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Timeline of troodontid research amp oldid 1177929837, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.