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Titanoceratops

Titanoceratops (meaning "titanic horned face") is a controversial genus of herbivorous ceratopsian dinosaur. It was a giant chasmosaurine ceratopsian that lived in the Late Cretaceous period (Campanian stage, about 75 million years ago[1]) in what is now New Mexico. Titanoceratops was named for its large size, being one of the largest known horned dinosaurs and the type species was named T. ouranos, after Uranus (Ouranos), the father of the Greek titans. It was named in 2011 by Nicholas R. Longrich for a specimen previously referred to Pentaceratops. Longrich believed that unique features found in the skull reveal it to have been a close relative of Triceratops, classified within the subgroup Triceratopsini. However, other researchers have expressed skepticism, and believe "Titanoceratops" to simply be an unusually large, old specimen of Pentaceratops.

Titanoceratops
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous, 75 Ma
Closeup of the unrestored region of the skull
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Clade: Ornithischia
Clade: Ceratopsia
Family: Ceratopsidae
Subfamily: Chasmosaurinae
Tribe: Triceratopsini
Genus: Titanoceratops
Longrich, 2011
Type species
Titanoceratops ouranos
Longrich, 2011

The holotype specimen is OMNH 10165, a partial skeleton including a mostly complete skull and jaws, and much of the skeleton. It was found in either the upper Fruitland Formation or the lower Kirtland Formation. The original quarry is lost, so it is not known which formation the fossil was excavated from. The formations are both late Campanian in age. The skull is incomplete, but as currently reconstructed it measures 2.65 metres (8.7 ft) long, making it a candidate for the longest skull of any land animal. With an estimated weight of 6.55 tonnes (6.45 long tons; 7.22 short tons) and length of 6.8 metres (22.3 ft), Titanoceratops was comparable in size with the largest ceratopsians, Torosaurus and Triceratops, and was likely the largest animal in its ecosystem, if not in North America, at the time.

Description edit

 
Life restoration
 
Skeletal reconstruction, holotype material in white, with human for scale

The skull measures 1.2 m (3.9 ft) from the tip of the snout to the quadrate, and the restored frill extends its length up to 2.65 m (8.7 ft)[2] making it a candidate for the longest skull of any land animal. Titanoceratops was as large as the later triceratopsins Triceratops and Torosaurus, with an estimated weight of 6.55 tonnes (7.22 short tons)[2] and a mounted skeleton measuring 6.8 metres (22.3 ft) long and 2.5 metres (8.2 ft) tall at the back.[3] In 2016 Gregory S. Paul gave a lower estimation of 6.5 meters (21.3 ft) and 4.5 tonnes (4.9 short tons). Tom Holtz (2012) noted that it is extremely similar to its closely related contemporaries Eotriceratops and Ojoceratops, which may all be synonymous.[4] The holotype skeleton of Titanoceratops consists of a partial skull with jaws, syncervical, cervical, dorsal, and sacral vertebrae, caudal vertebrae, ribs, humeri, a right radius, femora, tibiae, a right fibula, both ilia, both ischia, and ossified tendons.[2] In total, the amount of material assigned to Titanoceratops means it is quite well known, along with genera like Triceratops, Vagaceratops, Pentaceratops, Chasmosaurus, Centrosaurus, Styracosaurus, and Anchiceratops.[5]

History of study edit

 
Beds of the upper Fruitland Formation and lower Kirtland Formation in the vicinity of the Titanoceratops holotype quarry
 
J. Willis Stovall holds up the humerus, 1941

The holotype of Titanoceratops was collected from the upper Fruitland Formation or the lower Kirtland Formation in July 1941, by a field crew consisting J. Willis Stovall, his student Wann Langston Jr., and Donald E. Savage.[3] The precise location of the quarry is no longer known. The holotype specimen consists of most of the fore and hindlimbs, some vertebrae, a fairly complete skull with only one small section of the frill, and partial lower jaws.[2] The bones, being preserved in a fine-grained shale, were crushed and fragile, and so the skeleton was initially considered unsuitable for mounting. Later, however, the fossils were prepared and the skeleton put on display at the Oklahoma Museum of Natural History.

In 1998, the specimen was described by Thomas Lehman as an aberrant and unusually large individual of Pentaceratops sternbergii, previously described from the same area.[3] The specimen was later reinterpreted as a member of the Triceratopsini, the group including Triceratops, by Nicholas R. Longrich and given the name Titanoceratops ouranos in 2011. The name Titanoceratops is derived from the Greek Titan, a mythical race of giants, keras (κέρας), meaning "horn", and ops (ὤψ), "face". The species name ouranos, refers to Uranus, the father of the Titan race.[2] Longrich's re-interpretation would have major implications for the evolutionary history and biogeography of chasmosaurine dinosaurs. Previously, the origins of Triceratops were poorly known. Until the Longrich's re-interpretation of Titanoceratops, Eotriceratops was thought to be the oldest known triceratopsin, and only dated to 68 million years old, from the uppermost region of the Horseshoe Canyon Formation. No Campanian triceratopsins were known, so it appeared as if the group evolved in the Maastrichtian. If Titanoceratops is a member of this group, it would demonstrate that they evolved millions of years earlier than previously thought, and it would imply a five million year long gap in the fossil record and ghost lineage leading to Eotriceratops.[2] However, several subsequent studies have cast doubt on the hypothesis that Titanoceratops is a triceratopsin.[6]

Classification edit

 
Holotype restored based on Pentaceratops

OMNH 10165 is a particularly large chasmosaurine fossil, which Lehman originally assigned to the genus Pentaceratops, believing that it was a particularly large and old specimen. A 2011 study by Longrich disagreed with this interpretation, concluding that it was actually a distinct genus, which he named Titanoceratops. Longrich interpreted the specimen as sharing more characteristics with Triceratops and Torosaurus than with Pentaceratops, and he named a new group, Triceratopsini, to contain all of them.[2] Longrich used the following features to distinguish the specimen from other chasmosaurines: the possession of thin squamosals (Triceratops); an unsealed parietal fenestrae (Triceratops); an epijugal resembling a hornlike structure (Triceratops); a narrow median bar of the parietal (Triceratops, Torosaurus); a narial strut oriented vertically with a narrow base (Triceratops, Torosaurus); an enlarged epoccipital on the rear end of the squamosal (Triceratops, Torosaurus, Eotriceratops); an extremely enlarged premaxillary fossa (Triceratops, Torosaurus, Eotriceratops); and in lacking a narial process of the premaxilla that is dorsally inflected (Triceratops, Torosaurus, Eotriceratops).[2]

 
Front view of the mount

Lehman ignored Longrich's reclassification in his own subsequent publications.[7] As part of a 2020 study by Fowler and Freedman Fowler, the authors critically re-evaluated the evidence that Titanoceratops was a distinct genus. They agreed with Lehman's original assessment, that the features in the specimen that appeared unique were likely due simply to advanced age and unusually large size. Pending a full re-evaluation of the specimen by other researchers, Fowler and Freedman Fowler opted to consider OMNH 10165 simply a large Pentaceratops.[6]

Paleoecology edit

 
The fossilized leaf of Sabalites, a Cretaceous palm, documents the wet, warm climate that prevailed in Late Cretaceous New Mexico

Titanoceratops is known from OMNH 10165, a skeleton from the lowermost Fruitland or uppermost Kirtland Formation. The Fruitland Formation is about 100 metres (330 ft) thick, and consists of sandstones, mudstones, and abundant coals deposited in a coastal floodplain. Fossil trees are abundant in the area from which the holotype was collected, suggesting a wet, well-forested environment.

 
A fossil tree stump from the Coal Creek area where Titanoceratops was found, showing the extensive coal beds of the area

The Kirtland Formation, which conformably overlays the Fruitland, is approximately 600 metres (2,000 ft) thick, and made up of sandstone, siltstone, mudstone, and shale. Both formations are late Campanian in age. The Fossil Forest Member of the Fruitland is 74.11 ± 0.62 million years old, and the Hunter Wash Member of the Kirtland is between 73.37 ± 0.18 and 73.04 ± 0.25 million years in age. The two members combined make up the Hunter Wash local fauna. Therefore, Titanoceratops dates between 74 and 73 million years ago.[2] The age Titanoceratops lived in is called the Kirtlandian land-vertebrate age, and it is characterized by the appearance of Pentaceratops sternbergii.[8]

A moderately diverse fauna is known from the Kirtland and Fruitland formations.[2] Among the dinosaurs known from the Fruitland and Kirtland formations are the theropods Bistahieversor sealeyi (previously Daspletosaurus and Albertosaurus sp.[8]), "Saurornitholestes" robustus, Paronychodon lacustris,[8] and an indeterminate ornithomimid (previously Ornithomimus antiquus[8]); the hadrosaurids Anasazisaurus horneri and Parasaurolophus cyrtocristatus; the pachycephalosaur Stegoceras novomexicanum (previously S. validum);[9] the ankylosaur Nodocephalosaurus kirtlandensis; and the ceratopsians Pentaceratops sternbergii and an unidentified centrosaurine.[2]

Non-dinosaurian fauna include the fishes Myledaphus bypartitus, and Melvius chauliodous; the turtles Denazinemys ornata, Denazinemys nodosa, Boremys grandis, Neurankylus baeuri, Adocus bossi, Adocus kirtlandicus, Basilemys nobilis, Asperideretes ovatus, "Plastomenus" robustus, and Bothremydidae n. gen., barberl; the crocodylians Denazinosuchus kirtlandicus, Brachychampsa montana, Deinosuchus rugosus, and Leidyosuchus sp.; and the mammalians Paracimexomys judithae, Mesodma senecta, Mesodma sp., Cimexomys sp., Cinemoxys antiquus, Kimbetohia campi, Cimolodon electus, Meniscoessus intermedius, Essonodon sp., Alphadon marshi, Alphadon wilsoni, Alphadon sp. A, Alphadon sp. B, Alphadon? sp., Pediomys cooki; Gypsonictops sp., Cimolestes sp., and an indeterminate eucosmodontid.[8]

Titanoceratops supports the idea that late Cretaceous dinosaur faunas were highly endemic, with distinct species found in the Southern Great Plains of New Mexico, and the Northern Great Plains of Montana and Canada. Despite extensive sampling to the north in the Dinosaur Park Formation and Two Medicine Formation, triceratopsins are unknown there. This implies that the triceratopsins originally evolved in the south, then spread north in the Maastrichtian.[2]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Fowler, D. W. 2017. Revised geochronology, correlation, and dinosaur stratigraphic ranges of the Santonian-Maastrichtian (Late Cretaceous) formations of the Western Interior of North America. PLoS ONE 12(11): e0188426.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Longrich, N.R. (2011). "Titanoceratops ouranos, a giant horned dinosaur from the Late Campanian of New Mexico". Cretaceous Research. 32 (3): 264–276. Bibcode:2011CrRes..32..264L. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2010.12.007.[dead link]
  3. ^ a b c Lehman, Thomas M. (1998). "A Gigantic Skull and Skeleton of the Horned Dinosaur Pentaceratops sternbergi from New Mexico". Journal of Paleontology. 72 (5): 894–906. doi:10.1017/S0022336000027220. JSTOR 1306666. S2CID 132807103.
  4. ^ Holtz, T.R. Jr. (2012). Dinosaurs: The Most Complete, Up-to-Date Encyclopedia for Dinosaur Lovers of All Ages. Random House Books for Young Readers. p. 432. ISBN 978-0-375-82419-7.
  5. ^ Dodson, P. (2013). "Ceratopsia increase: history and trends". Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. 50 (2013): 294–305. Bibcode:2013CaJES..50..294D. doi:10.1139/cjes-2012-0085.
  6. ^ a b Fowler, Denver W.; Freedman Fowler, Elizabeth A. (2020-06-05). "Transitional evolutionary forms in chasmosaurine ceratopsid dinosaurs: evidence from the Campanian of New Mexico". PeerJ. 8: e9251. doi:10.7717/peerj.9251. ISSN 2167-8359. PMC 7278894. PMID 32547873.
  7. ^ Wick, S.L.; Lehman, T.M. (2013). "A new ceratopsian dinosaur from the Javelina Formation (Maastrichtian) of West Texas and implications for chasmosaurine phylogeny". Naturwissenschaften. 100 (2013): 667–682. Bibcode:2013NW....100..667W. doi:10.1007/s00114-013-1063-0. PMID 23728202. S2CID 16048008.
  8. ^ a b c d e 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.). (PDF). Vol. 35. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin. pp. 7–23. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-01-05.
  9. ^ Jasinski, S.E.; Sullivan, R.M. (2011). (PDF). New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science, Bulletin. 53: 202–213. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 September 2011.


External links edit

The Discovery of Titanoceratops - Nick Longrich

titanoceratops, meaning, titanic, horned, face, controversial, genus, herbivorous, ceratopsian, dinosaur, giant, chasmosaurine, ceratopsian, that, lived, late, cretaceous, period, campanian, stage, about, million, years, what, mexico, named, large, size, being. Titanoceratops meaning titanic horned face is a controversial genus of herbivorous ceratopsian dinosaur It was a giant chasmosaurine ceratopsian that lived in the Late Cretaceous period Campanian stage about 75 million years ago 1 in what is now New Mexico Titanoceratops was named for its large size being one of the largest known horned dinosaurs and the type species was named T ouranos after Uranus Ouranos the father of the Greek titans It was named in 2011 by Nicholas R Longrich for a specimen previously referred to Pentaceratops Longrich believed that unique features found in the skull reveal it to have been a close relative of Triceratops classified within the subgroup Triceratopsini However other researchers have expressed skepticism and believe Titanoceratops to simply be an unusually large old specimen of Pentaceratops TitanoceratopsTemporal range Late Cretaceous 75 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Closeup of the unrestored region of the skull Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Clade Dinosauria Clade Ornithischia Clade Ceratopsia Family Ceratopsidae Subfamily Chasmosaurinae Tribe Triceratopsini Genus TitanoceratopsLongrich 2011 Type species Titanoceratops ouranosLongrich 2011 The holotype specimen is OMNH 10165 a partial skeleton including a mostly complete skull and jaws and much of the skeleton It was found in either the upper Fruitland Formation or the lower Kirtland Formation The original quarry is lost so it is not known which formation the fossil was excavated from The formations are both late Campanian in age The skull is incomplete but as currently reconstructed it measures 2 65 metres 8 7 ft long making it a candidate for the longest skull of any land animal With an estimated weight of 6 55 tonnes 6 45 long tons 7 22 short tons and length of 6 8 metres 22 3 ft Titanoceratops was comparable in size with the largest ceratopsians Torosaurus and Triceratops and was likely the largest animal in its ecosystem if not in North America at the time Contents 1 Description 2 History of study 3 Classification 4 Paleoecology 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksDescription edit nbsp Life restoration nbsp Skeletal reconstruction holotype material in white with human for scale The skull measures 1 2 m 3 9 ft from the tip of the snout to the quadrate and the restored frill extends its length up to 2 65 m 8 7 ft 2 making it a candidate for the longest skull of any land animal Titanoceratops was as large as the later triceratopsins Triceratops and Torosaurus with an estimated weight of 6 55 tonnes 7 22 short tons 2 and a mounted skeleton measuring 6 8 metres 22 3 ft long and 2 5 metres 8 2 ft tall at the back 3 In 2016 Gregory S Paul gave a lower estimation of 6 5 meters 21 3 ft and 4 5 tonnes 4 9 short tons Tom Holtz 2012 noted that it is extremely similar to its closely related contemporaries Eotriceratops and Ojoceratops which may all be synonymous 4 The holotype skeleton of Titanoceratops consists of a partial skull with jaws syncervical cervical dorsal and sacral vertebrae caudal vertebrae ribs humeri a right radius femora tibiae a right fibula both ilia both ischia and ossified tendons 2 In total the amount of material assigned to Titanoceratops means it is quite well known along with genera like Triceratops Vagaceratops Pentaceratops Chasmosaurus Centrosaurus Styracosaurus and Anchiceratops 5 History of study edit nbsp Beds of the upper Fruitland Formation and lower Kirtland Formation in the vicinity of the Titanoceratops holotype quarry nbsp J Willis Stovall holds up the humerus 1941 The holotype of Titanoceratops was collected from the upper Fruitland Formation or the lower Kirtland Formation in July 1941 by a field crew consisting J Willis Stovall his student Wann Langston Jr and Donald E Savage 3 The precise location of the quarry is no longer known The holotype specimen consists of most of the fore and hindlimbs some vertebrae a fairly complete skull with only one small section of the frill and partial lower jaws 2 The bones being preserved in a fine grained shale were crushed and fragile and so the skeleton was initially considered unsuitable for mounting Later however the fossils were prepared and the skeleton put on display at the Oklahoma Museum of Natural History In 1998 the specimen was described by Thomas Lehman as an aberrant and unusually large individual of Pentaceratops sternbergii previously described from the same area 3 The specimen was later reinterpreted as a member of the Triceratopsini the group including Triceratops by Nicholas R Longrich and given the name Titanoceratops ouranos in 2011 The name Titanoceratops is derived from the Greek Titan a mythical race of giants keras keras meaning horn and ops ὤps face The species name ouranos refers to Uranus the father of the Titan race 2 Longrich s re interpretation would have major implications for the evolutionary history and biogeography of chasmosaurine dinosaurs Previously the origins of Triceratops were poorly known Until the Longrich s re interpretation of Titanoceratops Eotriceratops was thought to be the oldest known triceratopsin and only dated to 68 million years old from the uppermost region of the Horseshoe Canyon Formation No Campanian triceratopsins were known so it appeared as if the group evolved in the Maastrichtian If Titanoceratops is a member of this group it would demonstrate that they evolved millions of years earlier than previously thought and it would imply a five million year long gap in the fossil record and ghost lineage leading to Eotriceratops 2 However several subsequent studies have cast doubt on the hypothesis that Titanoceratops is a triceratopsin 6 Classification edit nbsp Holotype restored based on Pentaceratops OMNH 10165 is a particularly large chasmosaurine fossil which Lehman originally assigned to the genus Pentaceratops believing that it was a particularly large and old specimen A 2011 study by Longrich disagreed with this interpretation concluding that it was actually a distinct genus which he named Titanoceratops Longrich interpreted the specimen as sharing more characteristics with Triceratops and Torosaurus than with Pentaceratops and he named a new group Triceratopsini to contain all of them 2 Longrich used the following features to distinguish the specimen from other chasmosaurines the possession of thin squamosals Triceratops an unsealed parietal fenestrae Triceratops an epijugal resembling a hornlike structure Triceratops a narrow median bar of the parietal Triceratops Torosaurus a narial strut oriented vertically with a narrow base Triceratops Torosaurus an enlarged epoccipital on the rear end of the squamosal Triceratops Torosaurus Eotriceratops an extremely enlarged premaxillary fossa Triceratops Torosaurus Eotriceratops and in lacking a narial process of the premaxilla that is dorsally inflected Triceratops Torosaurus Eotriceratops 2 nbsp Front view of the mount Lehman ignored Longrich s reclassification in his own subsequent publications 7 As part of a 2020 study by Fowler and Freedman Fowler the authors critically re evaluated the evidence that Titanoceratops was a distinct genus They agreed with Lehman s original assessment that the features in the specimen that appeared unique were likely due simply to advanced age and unusually large size Pending a full re evaluation of the specimen by other researchers Fowler and Freedman Fowler opted to consider OMNH 10165 simply a large Pentaceratops 6 Paleoecology edit nbsp The fossilized leaf of Sabalites a Cretaceous palm documents the wet warm climate that prevailed in Late Cretaceous New Mexico Titanoceratops is known from OMNH 10165 a skeleton from the lowermost Fruitland or uppermost Kirtland Formation The Fruitland Formation is about 100 metres 330 ft thick and consists of sandstones mudstones and abundant coals deposited in a coastal floodplain Fossil trees are abundant in the area from which the holotype was collected suggesting a wet well forested environment nbsp A fossil tree stump from the Coal Creek area where Titanoceratops was found showing the extensive coal beds of the area The Kirtland Formation which conformably overlays the Fruitland is approximately 600 metres 2 000 ft thick and made up of sandstone siltstone mudstone and shale Both formations are late Campanian in age The Fossil Forest Member of the Fruitland is 74 11 0 62 million years old and the Hunter Wash Member of the Kirtland is between 73 37 0 18 and 73 04 0 25 million years in age The two members combined make up the Hunter Wash local fauna Therefore Titanoceratops dates between 74 and 73 million years ago 2 The age Titanoceratops lived in is called the Kirtlandian land vertebrate age and it is characterized by the appearance of Pentaceratops sternbergii 8 A moderately diverse fauna is known from the Kirtland and Fruitland formations 2 Among the dinosaurs known from the Fruitland and Kirtland formations are the theropods Bistahieversor sealeyi previously Daspletosaurus and Albertosaurus sp 8 Saurornitholestes robustus Paronychodon lacustris 8 and an indeterminate ornithomimid previously Ornithomimus antiquus 8 the hadrosaurids Anasazisaurus horneri and Parasaurolophus cyrtocristatus the pachycephalosaur Stegoceras novomexicanum previously S validum 9 the ankylosaur Nodocephalosaurus kirtlandensis and the ceratopsians Pentaceratops sternbergii and an unidentified centrosaurine 2 Non dinosaurian fauna include the fishes Myledaphus bypartitus and Melvius chauliodous the turtles Denazinemys ornata Denazinemys nodosa Boremys grandis Neurankylus baeuri Adocus bossi Adocus kirtlandicus Basilemys nobilis Asperideretes ovatus Plastomenus robustus and Bothremydidae n gen barberl the crocodylians Denazinosuchus kirtlandicus Brachychampsa montana Deinosuchus rugosus and Leidyosuchus sp and the mammalians Paracimexomys judithae Mesodma senecta Mesodma sp Cimexomys sp Cinemoxys antiquus Kimbetohia campi Cimolodon electus Meniscoessus intermedius Essonodon sp Alphadon marshi Alphadon wilsoni Alphadon sp A Alphadon sp B Alphadon sp Pediomys cooki Gypsonictops sp Cimolestes sp and an indeterminate eucosmodontid 8 Titanoceratops supports the idea that late Cretaceous dinosaur faunas were highly endemic with distinct species found in the Southern Great Plains of New Mexico and the Northern Great Plains of Montana and Canada Despite extensive sampling to the north in the Dinosaur Park Formation and Two Medicine Formation triceratopsins are unknown there This implies that the triceratopsins originally evolved in the south then spread north in the Maastrichtian 2 See also edit nbsp Dinosaurs portal nbsp Paleontology portal Timeline of ceratopsian researchReferences edit Fowler D W 2017 Revised geochronology correlation and dinosaur stratigraphic ranges of the Santonian Maastrichtian Late Cretaceous formations of the Western Interior of North America PLoS ONE 12 11 e0188426 a b c d e f g h i j k l Longrich N R 2011 Titanoceratops ouranos a giant horned dinosaur from the Late Campanian of New Mexico Cretaceous Research 32 3 264 276 Bibcode 2011CrRes 32 264L doi 10 1016 j cretres 2010 12 007 dead link a b c Lehman Thomas M 1998 A Gigantic Skull and Skeleton of the Horned Dinosaur Pentaceratops sternbergi from New Mexico Journal of Paleontology 72 5 894 906 doi 10 1017 S0022336000027220 JSTOR 1306666 S2CID 132807103 Holtz T R Jr 2012 Dinosaurs The Most Complete Up to Date Encyclopedia for Dinosaur Lovers of All Ages Random House Books for Young Readers p 432 ISBN 978 0 375 82419 7 Dodson P 2013 Ceratopsia increase history and trends Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 50 2013 294 305 Bibcode 2013CaJES 50 294D doi 10 1139 cjes 2012 0085 a b Fowler Denver W Freedman Fowler Elizabeth A 2020 06 05 Transitional evolutionary forms in chasmosaurine ceratopsid dinosaurs evidence from the Campanian of New Mexico PeerJ 8 e9251 doi 10 7717 peerj 9251 ISSN 2167 8359 PMC 7278894 PMID 32547873 Wick S L Lehman T M 2013 A new ceratopsian dinosaur from the Javelina Formation Maastrichtian of West Texas and implications for chasmosaurine phylogeny Naturwissenschaften 100 2013 667 682 Bibcode 2013NW 100 667W doi 10 1007 s00114 013 1063 0 PMID 23728202 S2CID 16048008 a b c d e 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 PDF Vol 35 New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin pp 7 23 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 01 05 Jasinski S E Sullivan R M 2011 Re evaluation of the 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 Texacephale langstoni PDF New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 53 202 213 Archived from the original PDF on 29 September 2011 External links editThe Discovery of Titanoceratops Nick Longrich Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Titanoceratops amp oldid 1217293177, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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