A basal dinosaur from the dawn of the dinosaur era in southwestern Pangaea
- PMID: 21233386
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1198467
A basal dinosaur from the dawn of the dinosaur era in southwestern Pangaea
Erratum in
- Science. 2011 Feb 11;331(6018):674
Abstract
Upper Triassic rocks in northwestern Argentina preserve the most complete record of dinosaurs before their rise to dominance in the Early Jurassic. Here, we describe a previously unidentified basal theropod, reassess its contemporary Eoraptor as a basal sauropodomorph, divide the faunal record of the Ischigualasto Formation with biozones, and bracket the formation with (40)Ar/(39)Ar ages. Some 230 million years ago in the Late Triassic (mid Carnian), the earliest dinosaurs were the dominant terrestrial carnivores and small herbivores in southwestern Pangaea. The extinction of nondinosaurian herbivores is sequential and is not linked to an increase in dinosaurian diversity, which weakens the predominant scenario for dinosaurian ascendancy as opportunistic replacement.
Comment in
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Paleontology. Pint-sized predator rattles the dinosaur family tree.Science. 2011 Jan 14;331(6014):134. doi: 10.1126/science.331.6014.134. Science. 2011. PMID: 21233355 No abstract available.
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