Avaceratops

A-vah-seh-rah-tops.
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John Stewart

Paleoecologist

John Stewart is a distinguished paleoecologist whose work has significantly advanced our understanding of prehistoric ecosystems. With over two decades dedicated to unearthing fossils across Asia and Africa

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Name

Avaceratops ‭(‬Ava horned face‭).

Phonetic

A-vah-seh-rah-tops.

Named By

Peter Dodson‭ ‬-‭ ‬1986.‭

Classification

Chordata,‭ ‬Reptilia,‭ ‬Dinosauria,‭ ‬Ornithischia,‭ ‬Marginocephalia,‭ ‬Ceratopsia,‭ ‬Ceratopsidae.

Diet

Herbivore.

Species

A.‭ ‬lammersi‭

Size

Possibly up to 4.2 meters long.

Known locations

USA,‭ ‬Montana‭ ‬-‭ ‬Judith River Formation.‭

Time Period

Campanian of the Cretaceous.

Fossil representation

Scattered partial remains.

In Depth

       Avaceratops was a relatively small ceratopsian dinosaur from the late Cretaceous of North America.‭ ‬What makes its classification difficult however is the fact that its neck frill is short and lacks any fenestrae‭ (‬openings‭)‬,‭ ‬and with the exception of others like Triceratops,‭ ‬ceratopsians can usually be divided into either centrosaurine or chasmosaurine groups,‭ ‬although both have fenestral openings in their frills.‭ ‬This had led to Avaceratops‭ ‬being placed between these two larger groups with speculation that it may represent the ancestral form of Triceratops as well as possibly being a juvenile specimen which could account for its small body size and relatively small horns and frill.

       The name Avaceratops is derived from Ava Cole,‭ ‬the wife of Eddie Cole who found the first fossil remains in‭ ‬1981.‭ ‬The species name A.‭ ‬lammersi is in honour of the Lammers family who owned the land the fossils were found on.‭ ‬The fossil remains were found in what would have been a stream bed in the Cretaceous,‭ ‬and it‭’‬s thought that this dinosaur was washed there where the running water scattered the bones as it decayed.

Further Reading

– Avaceratops lammersi: a new ceratopsid from the Judith River Formation of Montana. – Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 138(2):305-317. – P. Dodson – 1986. – The morphology of Avaceratops lammersi, a primitive ceratopsid from the Campanian of Montana. – Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 13(3, suppl.): 52A. – P. G. Penkalski – 1993. – The morphology and systematics of Avaceratops, a primitive horned dinosaur from the Judith River Formation (Late Campanian) of Montana, with the description of a second skull. – Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 19 (4): 692–711. – P. Penkalski & P. Dodson – 1999.

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