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Dinosaur Park Formation Ornithodirans



Greetings earthlings.
 
So...since not many people have written back regarding any issue of this list but the whole _Chirostenotes_ thing (which seems to mostly remain up to personal interpretation), I will assume that this list of the ornithodirans of the Dinosaur Park Formation is completely correct.  However, I thought that there were some more ankylosaurs discovered there recently.  And what is the consensus on the supposed _Erlikosaurus_ and _Avimimus_?  Were _Apatornis_ and _Quetzalcoatlus_ really from this formation particularly?  If there are any more changes, be they taxonomic, stratigraphic or otherwise, *please* write back *right away*.
 
Large Theropods:
Gorgosaurus libratus
Aublysodon mirandus
Daspletosaurus torosus
Undet. gracile tyrannosaurid (may be Aublysodon)
 
Small Theropods:
Apatornis sp.
Avimimus sp.
cf. Erlikosaurus
Troodon formosus
Dromaeosaurus albertensis
Sauronitholestes langstoni
Ricardoestesia gilmorei
Ricardoestesia sp.
Paronychodon lacustris
Chirostenotes pergracilis
Dromiceiomimus samueli
Ornithomimus edmontonensis
 
Hadrosauridae:
Brachylophosaurus canadensis
Gryposaurus notabilis
Kritosaurus incurvimanus
Prosaurolophus maximus
Corythosaurus casuarius
Lambeosaurus lambei
Lambeosaurus magnicristatus
Lambeosaurus n. sp.
Parasaurolophus walkeri
 
Hypsilophodontidae:
Orodromeus makelai
Thescelosaurus cf. neglectus
 
Pachycephalosauridae:
Stegoceras validum
Gravitholus albertae
Ornatotholus browni
Pachycephalosaur sp.
Undesc. full-domed pachycephalosaurid
 
Ankylosauria:
Euoplocephalus tutus
Edmontonia rugosidens
Panoplosaurus mirus
 
Ceratopsia:
cf. Leptoceratrops sp.
Montanoceratops
Centrosaurus apertus
Styracosaurus albertensis
Chasmosaurus belli
Chasmosaurus russelli
 
Pterosauria:
Quetzalcoatlus sp.
 
Thanks all.
-G.
 
--
Grant Harding
High school student/closet paleontologist
granth@cyberus.ca
Visit Grant Harding's Dinosaur Destination at http://www.cyberus.ca/~sharding/grant/
"...I suspect he actually has a subspecies of _Stenonychosaurus_, though I
haven't decided for sure...small Triassic carnivore--two meters from pes to
acetabulum. In point of fact, a rather ordinary theropod..." -from Crichton's _The Lost World_