Biology:Qiupalong

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Short description: Extinct genus of reptiles

Qiupalong
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous, 76.5–66 Ma
Holotype fossil
Scientific classification edit
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Animalia
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Chordata
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Dinosauria
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Saurischia
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Theropoda
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Ornithomimosauria
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Ornithomimidae
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Qiupalong
Xu et al., 2011
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: <div style="display:inline" class="script error: no such module "taxobox ranks".">†Q. henanensis
Binomial name
Qiupalong henanensis
Xu et al., 2011

Qiupalong is a genus of extinct ornithomimid theropods from the Late Cretaceous of what is now China and Canada .

Life restoration

The type specimen, holotype HGM 41HIII-0106, preserves partial hips and hindlimbs, and was named and described in 2011. The team describing it, Xu et al., found it to represent a new taxon, which they gave the binomial Qiupalong henanensis. The genus name comes from the Qiupa Formation, where the specimen comes from, and the Chinese word long, meaning "dragon". The specific epithet is derived from the taxon's occurrence in the Henan Province. Qiupalong is from the late Late Cretaceous, based on the age of the Qiupa Formation. Qiupalong is the first definitive Asian ornithomimid from outside of the Gobi Desert and is the southernmost occurrence of Late Cretaceous Ornithomimidae from eastern Asia.[1] Additional specimens, which include vertebrae, forelimbs, hips, hindlimbs, were later described in 2017 from the Belly River Group of Alberta, Canada . They were referred to Qiupalong sp., given that they occurred up to 10 million years before the type material of Qiupalong. These finds suggest that Qiupalong radiated to Asia from Canada.[2]

See also

References

  1. Li Xu; Yoshitsugu Kobayashi; Junchang Lü; Yuong-Nam Lee; Yongqing Liu; Kohei Tanaka; Xingliao Zhang; Songhai Jia et al. (2011). "A new ornithomimid dinosaur with North American affinities from the Late Cretaceous Qiupa Formation in Henan Province of China". Cretaceous Research 32 (2): 213–222. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2010.12.004. 
  2. McFeeters, B.; Ryan, M.J.; Schröder-Adams, C.; Currie, P.J. (2017). "First North American occurrences of Qiupalong (Theropoda: Ornithomimidae) and the palaeobiogeography of derived ornithomimids". FACETS 2: 355–373. doi:10.1139/facets-2016-0074. http://www.facetsjournal.com/article/facets-2016-0074/. 

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