[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][Subject Index][Author Index]

[dinosaur] Dinosaur tracks with deinonychosaurian from Lower Cretaceous of China (free pdf)



Ben Creisler
bcreisler@gmail.com

A new paper with free pdf:

Free pdf:

Lida Xing, Martin G. Lockley, Yongzhong Tang, Hao Wu, Hendrik Klein, W. Scott Persons IV, Miaoyan Wang, Xingwen Li & Hao Wu (2020)
Unusual dinosaur trackway preservation as clues to paleo-landscape and behavior from the Lower Cretaceous Luohe Formation, Shaanxi Province, China.
Geoscience Frontiers (advance online publication)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gsf.2020.09.014
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674987120302176


Highlights

Dinosaur trackways inhabited arid paleoenvironments represented by dune and interdune.
Poor-preserved trackways can still be very useful in reconstructing paleoenvironments.
The rare tetrapod activity and relationship to local paleoenvironments.
The 13th report of deinonychosaurian tracks from the Lower Cretaceous of China.

Abstract

Poorly preserved tracks have limited ichnotaxonomic or biotaxon utility, but may reveal useful information about the paleoenvironment, behavior and track taphonomy. Eight mostly parallel to sub parallel trackway segments (T1âT8) were registered on a truncation surface in the Lower Cretaceous Luohe Formation of Shaanxi Province. These attest to the passage of several bipeds, probably all theropods, in a paleo-contour-parallel, south-north direction in an arid setting. Quality of preservation in these trackways is poor, but notably superior in two additional trackways (T9âT10) on a foreset surface. Trackway T9 indicates a didactyl trackmaker, probably a deinonychosaurian, heading north to south. This is the 13th report of deinonychosaurian tracks from the Lower Cretaceous of China. If any or all the eight south-north oriented trackway segments represent continuations of other segments in the same trackways, the total number of individual trackmakers heading in this direction may have been as low as three. Although the trackway pattern and sedimentological evidence could indicate a physically controlled pathway influencing the direction taken by these trackmakers, the possibility that the trackways also represented small social or gregarious group cannot be ruled out.


Virus-free. www.avg.com