Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Huxleysaurus

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Kingdom
  
Animalia

Class
  
Reptilia

Order
  
†Ornithischia

Rank
  
Genus

Phylum
  
Chordata

Clade
  
Dinosauria

Suborder
  
†Ornithopoda

Huxleysaurus dinodatadeimagesdinosaursdinohhuxleysaurus

Similar
  
Darwinsaurus, Mantellodon, Hypselospinus, Barilium, Kukufeldia

Huxleysaurus (meaning "Huxley's lizard") is a genus of herbivorous styracosternan ornithopod dinosaur.

Contents

History

In 1889 Richard Lydekker named an Iguanodon "hollingtoniensis" based on remains found at Hollington near Hastings in East Sussex. It was named as a new genus Huxleysaurus by Gregory S. Paul in 2012. The generic name honours Thomas Henry Huxley, both for being "Darwin's Bulldog" and for coining the term "agnostic". The species had been considered by David Bruce Norman (2010) to be a synonym of Hypselospinus fittoni, but Paul rejected this as there was no overlapping material known from the two taxa showing shared derived traits (synapomorphies).

Discovery

Huxley had based the species on a syntype series found in the Wadhurst Clay of the Lower Wealden Formation dating from the early Valanginian. These included the specimens BMNH R1148 (a femur), BMNH R1629 (limb elements), and BMNH R1632 (vertebrae and a foot claw). Paul did not choose a lectotype but added specimens BMNH R811, BMNH R811b and BMNH R604, referred by Lydekker, to the "holotype". These additional fossils include vertebrae and an ilium.

Description

Paul gave a short diagnosis of the species. The thighbone is robust and moderately curved. The fourth trochanter is pendent. In 2013 Norman claimed that the robustness and curvature of the thighbone are not diagnostic and that the fourth trochanter is in fact not pendent, concluding that Huxleysaurus was a junior synonym of Hypselospinus.

Classification

Paul concluded that Huxleysaurus has a rather basal position in the Iguanodontia.

References

Huxleysaurus Wikipedia


Similar Topics