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Eoabelisaurus

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Clade
  
Dinosauria

Family
  
†Abelisauridae

Phylum
  
Chordata

Order
  
Saurischia

Class
  
Reptilia

Suborder
  
Theropoda

Species
  
†E. mefi

Rank
  
Genus

Eoabelisaurus Eoabelisaurus by Olorotitan on DeviantArt

Similar
  
Berberosaurus, Ekrixinatosaurus, Abelisauridae, Spinostropheus, Genyodectes

Indosuchus vs eoabelisaurus


Eoabelisaurus is a genus of abelisaurid theropod dinosaur from the Middle Jurassic Period of what is now South America. It was a bipedal carnivore that was estimated to have reached 6–6.5 metres (19.7–21.3 ft) in length, although more recent estimates have yielded a size of 5.8 metres (19 ft).

Contents

Eoabelisaurus Eoabelisaurus Pictures amp Facts The Dinosaur Database

Eoabelisaurus sounds


Discovery

Eoabelisaurus Eoabelisaurus Pictures amp Facts The Dinosaur Database

In 2009, Argentinian paleontologist Diego Pol discovered the skeleton of a theropod near the village of Cerro Cóndor in Chubut Province. In 2012, based on these remains, the type species Eoabelisaurus mefi was named and described by Pol and his German colleague Oliver Walter Mischa Rauhut. The generic name combines a Greek ἠώς, (eos), "dawn", with the name Abelisaurus, in reference to the fact it represents an early relative of the latter. The specific name honours the MEF, the Museo Paleontológico "Egidio Feruglio", where Pol is active.

Eoabelisaurus Poorly armed but successful LMU Munich

The holotype specimen, MPEF PV 3990, was uncovered in a layer of the Cañadón Asfalto Formation, a lacustrine deposit dating from the Aalenian-Bajocian, roughly 170 million years old. It consists of a nearly complete skeleton with skull, of a subadult or adult individual.

Phylogeny

Eoabelisaurus Eoabelisaurus Pictures amp Facts The Dinosaur Database

Eoabelisaurus was assigned to the basalmost position in Abelisauridae by its describers. It would, then, be the oldest abelisaurid species known by forty million years. The describers indicated that in the cladistic analysis a difference of only a single trait would have resulted in a position lower in the evolutionary tree, basal in the Abelisauroidea. The following cladogram follows their analysis.

Eoabelisaurus httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

References

Eoabelisaurus Wikipedia


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