Categories: Dinosaurs
Magnosaurus was a genus of basal tetanuran theropod dinosaur from the Middle Jurassic of England. It is based on fragmentary remains and has often been mixed up with Megalosaurus. In 1923, Friedrich von Huene named Megalosaurus nethercombensis from a partial skeleton (UMO J12143) from the Aalenian-Bajocian-age Middle Jurassic Inferior Oolite, near Nethercomb, north of Sherborne, in Dorset, England. The material included partial dentaries, dorsal and caudal vertebrae, a partial right pubis, internal casts of femora, and tibiae, from a possibly juvenile individual. Huene interpreted it as a more primitive species of Megalosaurus.[1] In 1926, he named the tooth species Megalosaurus lydekkeri for a specimen from the Lower Lias (Lower Jurassic) of England that Richard Lydekker had first described in 1888.[2][3] Finally, in 1932, he created the genus Magnosaurus for M. nethercombensis, referred M. lydekkeri to it, and created a third species, M. woodwardi, for the genus. M. woodwardi was based on a tibia (BMNH R.3542) from the Lower Lias, which he simultaneously and accidentally named Sarcosaurus andrewsi.[4] Until the 1990s, the genus had been ignored as a species of Megalosaurus.[5] However, with growing concern over what exactly is constituted by Megalosaurus, Magnosaurus has been generally separated as its own genus.[6][7][8] Also, there are morphological differences: for example, possible Megalosaurus tibiae are compressed at the far end, unlike those of Magnosaurus.[8] Rauhut (2003) considered it and Eustreptospondylus to be the same genus, because the two share a similarly-expanded front tip of the dentary and enlarged third dentary tooth, but this has not been generally followed.[7] Reviews have found it to most likely be a basal tetanuran, probably a megalosauroid, possibly a eustreptospondyline.[9][8] Because the remains are sparse, fragmentary, and possibly juvenile, details about the life and behaviour of Magnosaurus are unknown. It would have been a bipedal carnivore of moderate size for a dinosaur. The most similar animals probably would be animals like Eustreptospondylus, Dubreuillosaurus, and Afrovenator.[8] Paul (1988) roughly estimated the mass of the type individual as around 175 kg (386 lb), which would correspond to a length of roughly 4 m (13.1 ft), judging by his estimates for the sizes of other theropods.[9]
Contents
[edit] History and Taxonomy
[edit] Other Species
[edit] Paleobiology
[edit] References
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