Literature DB >> 18581087

Palaeoenvironmental controls on the distribution of Cretaceous herbivorous dinosaurs.

Richard J Butler1, Paul M Barrett.   

Abstract

Previous attempts to determine palaeoenvironmental preferences in dinosaurs have generally been qualitative assessments based upon data from restricted geographical areas. Here, we use a global database of Cretaceous herbivorous dinosaurs to identify significant associations between clades and broad palaeoenvironmental categories ('terrestrial', 'coastal', 'marine'). Nodosaurid ankylosaurs and hadrosaurids show significant positive associations with marine sediments, while marginocephalians (Ceratopsia, Pachycephalosauria), saurischians (herbivorous theropods, Sauropoda) and ankylosaurid ankylosaurs are significantly positively associated with terrestrial sediments. These results provide quantitative support for the hypothesis that some clades (Nodosauridae, Hadrosauridae) were more abundant in coastal and/or fluvial environments, while others (e.g. Marginocephalia, Ankylosauridae) preferentially inhabited more distal environments.

Entities:  

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18581087     DOI: 10.1007/s00114-008-0417-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Naturwissenschaften        ISSN: 0028-1042


  2 in total

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Authors:  A B Smith
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2.  Geologic constraints on the macroevolutionary history of marine animals.

Authors:  Shanan E Peters
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  2 in total
  16 in total

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4.  Dinosaur diversity and the rock record.

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8.  An analysis of pterosaurian biogeography: implications for the evolutionary history and fossil record quality of the first flying vertebrates.

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9.  The "χ" of the Matter: Testing the Relationship between Paleoenvironments and Three Theropod Clades.

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10.  New occurrences of fossilized feathers: systematics and taphonomy of the Santana Formation of the Araripe Basin (Cretaceous), NE, Brazil.

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