| Lufengosaurus | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||
| Name | Lufengosaurus | |||
| Class | Dinosauria | |||
| Name Translation | Named after Lufeng Basin (Lufeng reptile、Lizard from the Lufeng Series) | |||
| Period | Early Jurassic | |||
| Location | China | |||
| Diet | Plants | |||
| Size | 19.5 ft (6 m) | |||
Lufengosaurus was a Massospondylid sauropodomorph from the Early Jurassic of China.
There are many fossils of this dinosaur from the Lufeng basin of Yunnan Province in southwestern China. It is one of several basal sauropodomorphs known from the Early Jurassic Lufeng basin of Yunnan Probince, in southwestern China. It is one of several sauropodomorphs known from the Early Jurassic Lufeng Formation, along with some early crocodyliforms and mammals.
Although there are complete skeletons of this dinosaur, it is not fully described. The skull of Lufengosaurus was long and flat, and it had a small bump on its snout just above the nostril. It had a long neck.
Its teeth were blade-like with crowns that were wider at the bottom. The teeth were widely space. It probably ate plants, but its teeth were sharp and it may have also eaten small animals.
The front legs of Lufengosaurus were shorter than the powerful back legs. The animal walked on all fours, but probably rose on its back legs to feed on tall plants. The hands of Lufengosaurus had a large thumb with a claw, used for getting food and maybe as a weapon.
A skeleton of Lufengosaurus was the first dinosaur mounted in the People's Republic of China. It appeared on a Chinese postal stamp when the skeleton went on display.
It has been suggested that Lufengosaurus and Yunnanosaurus are the same animal. However, recent studies have determined that Lufengosaurus is a separate genus from Yunnanosaurus and the closely related South African dinosaur, Massospondylus.
In 2015, a Lufengosaurus fossil was found with preserved collagen protein. The fossil was over 100 million years than any other previously recorded fossil proteins at the time the research on the fossil was published in 2017.[1]
Discovery, taxonomy, and research[]
Description[]
Classification[]
Paleobiology[]
References[]
1. Picture from Kidsdinos[1]
2. Information Credits to "ROMTECH" Computer CD Dinosaur Discovery
