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Pentaceratops: Encyclopedia BETA


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Pentaceratops


fossil_range = Late Cretaceousimage = Ddd pentacer 300.jpg regnum = Animaliaphylum = Chordataclassis = Sauropsidasuperordo = Dinosauriaordo = Ornithischiasubordo = Marginocephaliasuperfamilia = Ceratopsoideainfraordo = Ceratopsiafamilia = Ceratopsidaesubfamilia = Ceratopsinaegenus = Pentaceratopsgenus_authority = Osborn, 1923

Pentaceratops (meaning "five-horned face" and derived from Greek "penta/πέντα" meaning 'five', "ceras/κέρας" meaning 'horn' and "-ops/ωψ" meaning 'face') is a ceratopsid herbivorous dinosaur genus from the Late Cretaceous period of North America. Its name is derived from its two long epijugal bones, spikes which protrude out sidewards from under its eyes, in addition to the three more obvious horns.

Pentaceratops lived around 75-73 million years ago, its remains having been mostly found in the Kirtland FormationSullivan, R.M. and S.G. Lucas. 2006. The Kirtlandian land-vertebrate "age"" faunal composition, temporal position and biostratigraphic correlation in the nonmarine Upper Cretaceous of western North America. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 35:7-29 in the San Juan Basin in New Mexico. Other dinosaurs which shared its time period include Parasaurolophus cyrtocristatus, the pachycephalosaur Prenocephale, the armored dinosaur Nodocephalosaurus and possibly the tyrannosaurid Daspletosaurus.

It was about 8 m (27 ft) long, and probably weighed around 5,500 kg (13,000 lb).

Discoveries and species

The first examples were collected by C. H. Sternberg in the San Juan Basin in New Mexico and described by Henry Fairfield Osborn in 1923, who obligingly gave it the specific name sternbergii after its discoverer. The frill of Pentaceratops is larger than that of Triceratops, with two large holes (fenestrae) in it. In 1930, Carl Wiman described a second species of Pentaceratops, P. fenestratus, but this was later determined to be the same species as the original finds. Further material discovered in Colorado has been identified as Pentaceratops in 2006Lucas, S.G., Sullivan, R.M., Hunt, A.P., 2006c, Re-evaluation of Pentaceratops and Chasmosaurus (Ornithischia, Ceratopsidae) in the Upper Cretaceous of the Western Interior: New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science, Bulletin 35.

Pentaceratops species
P. sternbergii

Pentaceratops has the distinction of being the species which the largest known skull for a land vertebrate belongs to. That skull and its associated skeleton are on display at the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History [1]. The skeleton was found in New Mexico in 1941.

Classification

Pentaceratops, life-size model

Within the Ceratopsia, Pentaceratops belonged to the subfamily Ceratopsinae and appears to be most closely related to Anchiceratops and the earlier genus Chasmosaurus. It may have been a close relative to the ancestor of Torosaurus, which lived a few million yeas later, right at the end of the Cretaceous period, when all Ceratopsians, indeed all dinosaurs, died out.

References


*

Diet

Pentaceratops, like all Ceratopsians, was a herbivore. During the Cretaceous, flowering plants were "geographically limited on the landscape", and so it is likely that this dinosaur fed on the predominant plants of the era: ferns, cycads and conifers. It would have used its sharp Ceratopsian beak to bite off the leaves or needles.

External links

*Pentaceratops; from the Dinosauricon website
*Pentaceratops, from DinoData.net
*Pentaceratops, from the Dinosaur Encyclopaedia at Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champagne
*Kids Zone page on dinosaur types
*Dinosaur Paleoecology
*Photo of Pentaceratops skull at Sam Noble Museum



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