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Deinonychosaur trackways in southeastern China record a possible giant troodontid

iScience, ISSN: 2589-0042, Vol: 27, Issue: 5, Page: 109598
2024
  • 2
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 3
    Captures
  • 142
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    2
    • Citation Indexes
      2
  • Captures
    3
  • Mentions
    142
    • News Mentions
      139
      • News
        139
    • References
      3
      • Wikipedia
        3

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Article Description

The Longxiang tracksite (lower Upper Cretaceous, Shanghang Basin) includes twelve didactyl deinonychosaur tracks that fall into two morphologies, differentiated by both size and form. The smaller tracks (∼11 cm long) are referable to the ichnogenus Velociraptorichnus. The larger tracks (∼36 cm long) establish the ichnotaxon Fujianipus yingliangi. Based on the size of the tracks, F. yingliangi has an estimated hip height of over 1.8 m, a size comparable to that of the largest known deinonychosaurs, i.e., Austroraptor and Utahraptor. The reduced form of digit IV, relative to digit III, indicates that F. yingliangi is a probable troodontid. Gigantism evidently evolved independently at least four times within the Deinonychosauria and within at least three major lineages: the Eudromaeosauria, Unenlagiidae, and Troodontidae. In the mid-Cretaceous of Asia, the evolution of F. yingliangi overlapped with that of early large-bodied tyrannosauroids and with previously established large allosaurids (although the latter may have been in decline).

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