Tyrant Dinosaur Evolution Tracks the Rise and Fall of Late Cretaceous Oceans
Authors:
Mark A. Loewen, Randall B. Irmis, Joseph J. W. Sertich, Philip J. Currie and Scott D. Sampson
Abstract:
The Late Cretaceous (~95–66 million years ago) western North American landmass of Laramidia displayed heightened non-marine vertebrate diversity and intracontinental regionalism relative to other latest Cretaceous Laurasian ecosystems. Processes generating these patterns during this interval remain poorly understood despite their presumed role in the diversification of many clades. Tyrannosauridae, a clade of large-bodied theropod dinosaurs restricted to the Late Cretaceous of Laramidia and Asia, represents an ideal group for investigating Laramidian patterns of evolution. We use new tyrannosaurid discoveries from Utah—including a new taxon which represents the geologically oldest member of the clade—to investigate the evolution and biogeography of Tyrannosauridae. These data suggest a Laramidian origin for Tyrannosauridae, and implicate sea-level related controls in the isolation, diversification, and dispersal of this and many other Late Cretaceous vertebrate clades.
Thursday, November 07, 2013
Lythronax, Teratophoneus and the Linkage of Evolution of Tyrranosaurs and Sea Level in the Late Cretaceous
Labels:
asia,
cretaceous,
dinosaurs,
evolution,
extinctions,
fossils,
mesozoic,
nonavian dinosaurs,
North america,
paleontology,
saurischians,
theropods,
tyrannosaurs
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