Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Where and When for Triceratops Discoveries Between 2006 to 2010 in Hell Creek, Montana


A stratigraphic survey of Triceratops localities in the Hell Creek Formation, northeastern Montana (2006–2010)

Authors:

Scannella et al

Abstract:

Here we provide a survey of Triceratops localities and accompanying stratigraphic data from the Hell Creek Formation of northeastern Montana. The majority of the sites discussed here were relocated or discovered during the last 5 yr of the Hell Creek Project (1999–2010), a multi-institutional effort to record a large volume of faunal, floral, and geologic data on the Hell Creek Formation in order to test evolutionary, paleoecological, and geological hypotheses. Triceratops is the most abundant dinosaur in the Hell Creek Formation and one of the most common nonavian dinosaurs of the Upper Cretaceous. It is known from hundreds of specimens, which have been collected since it was first described in 1889. Although these specimens provide a wealth of morphological data on Triceratops, many lack detailed stratigraphic information and context. Detailed stratigraphic and contextual data for more than 70 specimens of Triceratops collected during the Hell Creek Project make this data set among the most comprehensive for any nonavian dinosaur.

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