Predatory Dinosaur Remains from Madagascar: Implications for the Cretaceous Biogeography of Gondwana
- 15 May 1998
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 280 (5366) , 1048-1051
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.280.5366.1048
Abstract
Recent discoveries of fossil vertebrates from the Late Cretaceous of Madagascar include several specimens of a large theropod dinosaur. One specimen includes a nearly complete and exquisitely preserved skull with thickened pneumatic nasals, a median frontal horn, and a dorsal projection on the parietals. The new materials are assigned to the enigmatic theropod group Abelisauridae on the basis of a number of unique features. Fossil remains attributable to abelisaurids are restricted to three Gondwanan landmasses: South America, Madagascar, and the Indian subcontinent. This distribution is consistent with a revised paleogeographic reconstruction that posits prolonged links between these landmasses (via Antarctica), perhaps until late in the Late Cretaceous.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Jurassic and cretaceous plate tectonic reconstructionsPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- The Theropod Ancestry of Birds: New Evidence from the Late Cretaceous of MadagascarScience, 1998
- THE ORIGIN AND EVOLUTION OF DINOSAURSAnnual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, 1997
- The premaxilla ofMajungasaurus(Dinosauria: Theropoda), with implications for Gondwanan paleobiogeogrphyJournal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 1996
- Predatory Dinosaurs from the Sahara and Late Cretaceous Faunal DifferentiationScience, 1996
- The role of mantle plumes in continental breakup: case histories from GondwanalandNature, 1995
- Early Cretaceous Dinosaurs from the SaharaScience, 1994
- The role of Central Asia in dinosaurian biogeographyCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1993
- Tarascosaurus salluvicus nov. gen., nov. sp.,dinosaure théropode du Crétacé supérieur du Sud de la FranceGeobios, 1991
- The Gondwanian theropod families Abelisauridae and NoasauridaeHistorical Biology, 1991