David Marjanovic wrote-
Ligabueino also
has this? Where was it described?
Although the ungual of Ligabueino is unknown, a
phalanx strongly resembling II-2 of dromaeosaurs and troodontids is preserved
with the holotype. It has the characteristic elongate proximoventral heel
indicative of hyperextendability. It was described in-
Bonaparte, J. Formation, 1996. "Cretaceous
Tetrapods of Argentina," Muenchner Geowissenschaftliche Abhandlungen 30A: 73-130
[April 1996].
IIRC Dandakosaurus
is from India (far away from China then)? And Lukousaurus... didn't
someone think it was a crocodylomorph or something?
Good point about the possibility of India being far
away from China in the Triassic/Jurassic. I don't know much about
paleogeography though. Lukousaurus has the possibility of being a
crurotarsan or a theropod, as you can read here-
Gasosaurus? Maybe
it is such a ceratosaur too?
New studies by Currie
(pers. comm. to Holtz 1998, in Holtz 2000) indicate this is a carnosaur, perhaps
a sinraptorid.
Mickey
Mortimer
|