Neha Patil (Editor)

Nanosaurus

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

Clade
  
Dinosauria

Scientific name
  
Nanosaurus agilis

Rank
  
Genus

Class
  
Reptilia

Species
  
†N. agilis

Phylum
  
Chordata

Order
  
Ornithischia

Nanosaurus Nanosaurus Pictures amp Facts The Dinosaur Database

Family
  
†Nanosauridae Marsh, 1877b

Similar
  
Othnielia, Othnielosaurus, Laosaurus, Parksosaurus, Echinodon

Cocoaub nessie or nanosaurus 15 200 dots


Nanosaurus ("small or dwarf lizard") is the name given to a genus of dinosaur from the Late Jurassic. Described by Othniel Charles Marsh in 1877, it is a poorly known ornithischian of uncertain affinities. Its fossils are known from the Morrison Formation of Colorado and possibly Wyoming. It has often been illustrated in the popular literature (as a "tiny dinosaur"), leaving the impression that more is known about it than actually is. Most representations are actually of what is now called Othnielosaurus or Othnielia.

Contents

Nanosaurus wwwdinosaurfactnetPicturesNanosaurus2jpg

History and taxonomyEdit

Nanosaurus Nanosaurus dinosaur

Marsh named three species of his new genus in 1877, two of which are today known to be dinosaurian:

Nanosaurus Nanosaurus Dinosaur Facts Dinosaurs Pictures and Facts

  • N. agilis, based on YPM 1913, found by school intendant Oramel Lucas, with remains including impressions of a dentary, and postcranial bits including an ilium, thigh bones, shin bones, and a fibula;
  • N. rex, based on YPM 1915 (also called 1925 in Galton, 2007), a complete thigh bone;
  • and N. victor, which he soon recognized to be something completely different, and is now known as the small, bipedal crocodylian relative Hallopus.

  • Nanosaurus Nanosaurus Skeleton In Situ

    He regarded both dinosaur species as small ("cat sized" or "fox-sized") animals. Marsh also named a family for Nanosaurus, Nanosauridae, in which he placed only Nanosaurus.

    Nanosaurus Dinosaur Stamps

    With the 1881 reassignment of N. victor, matters stood static for most of the next century. Marsh had originally set up Nanosauridae for this genus, but it generally was included in Hypsilophodontidae after his death.

    Nanosaurus Dinosaurs jurassic dinosaurs jurassic era and jurassic period

    In 1973, Peter Galton and Jim Jenson described a partial skeleton (BYU ESM 163 as of Galton, 2007) missing the head, hands, and tail as Nanosaurus (?) rex. By 1977, he had determined that Nanosaurus agilis was quite different from N. rex and the new skeleton, and coined Othnielia for N. rex. He referred Nanosaurus proper to the nebulous "Fabrosauridae", but other authors, including Paul Sereno, regarded it as a dubious basal ornithischian of unknown affinities, or as a dubious hypsilophodontid. Most recently, Galton (2007) considered it as a possibly valid basal ornithopod, and pointed out similarities with heterodontosaurids in the thigh bone. He also tentatively assigned to it some teeth that had been referred to Drinker.

    PaleobiologyEdit

    Because of the few remains, about all that can be said about Nanosaurus in life with any accuracy is that it was a small, bipedal, cursorial animal, probably an herbivore.

    References

    Nanosaurus Wikipedia