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The large theropod Abelisaurus comahuensis was similar to Albertosaurus from Alberta, Canada especially in it's size and lifestyle. It was a bipedal carnivore that probably reached 7 to 9 meters (25 to 30 feet) in length, although it is known from only one partial skull. But it's skull led two Argentinian paleontologists to put it in it's own family now known as the Abelisaurida. It lived in Argentina during the Late Cretaceous, 70 to 66 million years ago.

Discovery and naming[]

Fm Anacleto Auca Mahuida 2

The Anacleto Formation where Abelisaurus remains have been found

Coining the type species Abelisaurus comahuensis, both genus and species were named and described by Argentine paleontologists José Bonaparte and Fernando Emilio Novas in 1985. The generic name recognizes Roberto Abel as the discoverer of the type specimen, and also as the former director of the provincial Museum of Cipolletti in Argentina, where the specimen is housed. It also incorporates the Greek σαυρος ('sauros'), meaning 'lizard'. The specific name comahuensis honors the Comahue region of Argentina, where the fossil was found.

The holotype, MC 11078, was in 1983 uncovered at the "Cantera de la Pala Mécanica"-site in the Lago Pellegrini quarries exploited by Abel since 1975. This single known fossil of Abelisaurus consists of a skull, lacking the lower jaws, that is incomplete, especially on the right side. Most of the connections between the snout and the back of the skull are absent. It is also missing most of the palate (roof of the mouth). Despite the missing pieces, it could be estimated at over 85 centimetres.

Abelisaurus is one of the many dinosaurs that have been discovered in Patagonia. It was originally described as coming from the Allen Formation but subsequent research proved the remains were actually found in the older Anacleto Formation (part of the Neuquén Group) of Rio Negro Province, Argentina. However, locally Abelisaurus is known to have come from the Sr. Fernandez field, which is in the Coniacian Allen Formation. Clearly, more study is required. The Anacleto is a geologic formation in South America, dating from the early Campanian stage of the Late Cretaceous Period, between 83 and 80 million years ago.

In 2009, Novas suggested that Aucasaurus garridoi might be a junior synonym of Abelisaurus comahuensis. In 2010, Gregory S. Paul renamed Aucasaurus garridoi into Abelisaurus garridoi. This has found no acceptance.

Description[]

Carnotaurini sizes updated

Size comparison of Abelisaurus (red) with other carnotaurins

Abelisaurus comahuensis jmallon

Artist's restoration

As only the skull is known, it has proven difficult to provide a reliable size estimate of Abelisaurus. It has transpired that abelisaurids have relatively short heads. In 2010, Gregory S. Paul estimated its body length at ten metres (32 ft 10 in), its weight at 3 tonnes (3 long tons; 3 short tons). In 2012 Thomas Holtz gave a possible length of 11 metres (36.3 feet). In 2016, its length was estimated to be 7.4 metres (24 ft 3 in) in a comprehensive analysis of abelisaur size. Others authors gave a similar size at 7.2 metres (23.6 feet) and 1.65 tonnes (1.82 short tons).

Skull length was estimated at 85 centimetres (33 12 in) in 1985. The skull is relatively deep. Although there are no bony crests or horns, like those found in some other abelisaurids, such as Carnotaurus, rough ridges on the snout and above the eyes might have supported some kind of crest made out of keratin, which would not have become fossilized. The skull roof is thickened. There are also very large fenestrae (window-like openings) in the skull, which are found in many dinosaurs and reduce skull weight. One of these is a large triangular antorbital fenestra in the side of the snout. The eye socket behind it is rather high. It is constricted in the middle by bony projections of the lacrimal bone in the front and the postorbital bone at the rear. The eye was located above the constriction. Behind the eye socket a large triangular infratemporal fenestra is present. Its form reflects a strong forward inclination of the back of the skull.

The front snout bone, the praemaxilla, bore four relatively small teeth. The maxilla behind it had at least seven, but perhaps as many as thirteen, larger teeth.

Classification[]

Fossil dinosaur tooth (possibly from Abelisaurus)

Tooth of cf. Abelisaurus

Bonaparte and Novas placed Abelisaurus in the newly created family Abelisauridae in 1985. They thought it was a member of the Carnosauria. Abelisaurus was the first abelisaurid named.

Many other abelisaurids have since been discovered, including much more complete specimens of AucasaurusCarnotaurus and Majungasaurus. They showed that abelisaurids were not carnosaurs in the modern sense, but belonged to the Neoceratosauria instead. Some scientists place Abelisaurus as a basal abelisaurid, outside the subfamily Carnotaurinae. Others are less certain of its position. Abelisaurus shares some skull features, such as a relative elongation, with the carcharodontosaurids, a group unrelated to other species assigned to the Abelisauridae, and, since it is known only from a skull, it has been suggested that future discoveries may show that Abelisaurus was in fact a carcharodontosaurid. However, this is thought unlikely.

Paleobiology[]

Abelisaurus BW

Restoration of the head of Abelisaurus

It has been considered to be more closely related to theropod Ceratosaurus from the Jurassic Period. Only the skull of Abelisaurus been found, but its body proportions were probably similar to other large theropods with the same size skulls (three feet long). Carnotaurus had slender legs with the front shorter than the back. Since Carnotaurus probably was an early abelisaurid, scientists suppose that Abelisaurus also had short front limbs and slender legs. Other details of its body are unknown. The discovery of Abelisaurus is important because it shed light on many different southern-hemisphere theropods that are known only from fragmentary and puzzling material. These remains were difficutlt to identify and were occasionally used to suggest that late Cretaceous tyrannosaurids fromt the northern hemisphere were in the southern hemisphere. Now that good abelisaurid material has been discovered and described, sceintists have learned that many of those remains were abelisaurids. The possibility of southern-hemisphere tyrannosaurids is less likely.

JPInstitute.com Description[]

Abelisaurus was a medium-sized theropod (a two-legged meat-eater) with big jaws full of sharp serrated teeth. Very little of this dinosaur has been found - only a few pieces of the skull. This is enough for scientists to realize that it is a new type of dinosaur that, in some ways, looked like Tyrannosaurus rex.

This dinosaur genus, Abelisauridae, is based on only a few skull fragments found in 1985 in Argentina. It seems to have some superficial resemblance to the head of T. rex.

Dinosaur Field Guide Description[]

Abelisaurus ("[Roberto] Abel's lizard") was one of the top predators in South America at the end of the Age of Dinosaurs. While Tyrannosaurus and its kin dominated the northern continents during the Late Cretaceous, the abelisaurs ruled South America, India, and Madagascar. Like the tyrannosaurs, abelisaurs had big skulls with knobby snouts. Unlike the tyrannosaurs, however, abelisaurs had teeth that were fairly small. The rounded snout of Abelisaurus and its relatives probably helped it to hold on to what it was biting. Its fused skull roof made its head hard enough to be used as a weapon in fights between rival abelisaurs. By pushing each other with their heads, one Abelisaurus could try to defeat the other without having to face attack by claws or jaws. Abelisaurus is known at present only from a single giant skull, over 33 inches (85 cm) long.

Fun Facts[]

Possible relatives of Abelisaurus are known from Spain and France.

Trivia[]

More species of fossil dinosaurs have been found in Argentina than any other country in the Southen Hemisphere.

Gallery[]

Links[]

http://web.archive.org/web/20040420195159fw_/http://www.jpinstitute.com/dinopedia/dinocards/dc_abeli.html https://web.archive.org/web/20080517012524/http://kids.yahoo.com/dinosaurs/373--Abelisaurus

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