Fossil Wiki

Fossil Wiki has moved! The new site is available at YourWiki

READ MORE

Fossil Wiki
Eotyrannus
Fossil range: Early Cretaceous
Scientific classification

Kingdom:

Animalia

Phylum:

Chordata

Class:

Sauropsida

Superorder:

Dinosauria

Order:

Saurischia

Suborder:

Theropoda

Genus:

Eotyrannus
Hutt et al., 2001

Eotyrannus (meaning "dawn tyrant") was a genus of tyrannosauroid theropod dinosaur hailing from the Early Cretaceous Wessex Formation beds, included in Wealden Group, located in the southwest coast of the Isle of Wight, United Kingdom. The remains (MIWG1997.550), consisting of assorted skull, axial skeleton and appendicular skeleton elements, from a juvenile or subadult, found in a plant debris clay bed, were described by Hutt et al. in early 2001.[1]

The etymology of the generic name refers to the animal’s character as an "early tyrant", while the specific descriptor is a mention to the discoverer of the fossil.

Description[]

Eotyrannus is a 6 meter-long theropod which has the following tyrannosauroid characters: serrated premaxillary teeth with a D cross section, proportionally elongate tibiae and metatarsals. Primitive characters for Tyrannosauroidea are the elongate neck vertebrae and the long, well-developed arms forelimbs along with the undecorated dorsal surface of the skull, unlike the more advanced tyrannosaurids. However this animal, proportionally, has one of the longest hands in Theropoda known to date.

This theropod would be a probable predator of such herbivorous dinosaurs as Hypsilophodon and Iguanodon.

E. lengi’s find corroborates the notion that early tyrannosauroids were gracile with long forelimbs and three-fingered grasping hands, although the somewhat large size of the animal either means that early evolution for this clade was carried out at a large size or Eotyrannus developed large size independently.[2] The find of this animal in Europe puts interesting questions to the purported Asian origin for these animals along with North American Stokesosaurus and European Aviatyrannis arguing for a more complex biogeography for tyrannosauroids.

Discovery and naming[]

Phylogeny[]

The discovery of Eotyrannus corroborates the notion that early tyrannosauroids were gracile with long forelimbs and three-fingered grasping hands, although the somewhat large size of the animal either means that early evolution for this clade was carried out at a large size or Eotyrannus developed large size independently. The find of this animal in Europe puts interesting questions to the purported Asian origin for these animals along with North American Stokesosaurus and European Aviatyrannis arguing for a more complex biogeography for tyrannosauroids.

Below is a cladogram by Loewen et al. in 2013 that includes most tyrannosauroid genera.

Tyrannosauroidea
Proceratosauridae
Proceratosaurus bradleyi
Kileskus aristotocus
Guanlong wucaii
Sinotyrannus kazuoensis
Juratyrant langhami
Stokesosaurus clevelandi
Dilong paradoxus
Eotyrannus lengi
Bagaraatan ostromi
Raptorex kriegsteini
Dryptosaurus aquilunguis
Alectrosaurus olseni
Xiongguanlong baimoensis
Appalachiosaurus montgomeriensis
Alioramus altai
Alioramus remotus
Tyrannosauridae

A recent analysis has found Eotyrannus to be a megaraptoran closely related to taxon like Megaraptor (Porfiri et al., 2014)

References[]

  1. ^ Hutt, S., Naish, D., Martill, D.M., Barker, M.J., and Newbery, P. (2001). "A preliminary account of a new tyrannosauroid theropod from the Wessex Formation (Cretaceous) of southern England." Cretaceous Research, 22: 227–242.
  2. ^ Holtz, T. R. Jr. (1994). "The phylogenetic position of the Tyrannosauridae: implications for theropod systematics." Journal of Paleontology, 68: 1100–1117.