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The Lower Lufeng Series (or Lower Lufeng Formation) is a Lower Jurassic sedimentary rock formation found in Yunnan, China. It has two units: the lower Dull Purplish Beds are of Hettangian age, and Dark Red Beds are of Sinemurian age.[1] It is known for its fossils of early dinosaurs. The Dull Purplish Beds have yielded the possible therizinosaur Eshanosaurus, the possible theropod Lukousaurus, and the "prosauropods" "Gyposaurus" sinensis, Lufengosaurus, Jingshanosaurus, and Yunnanosaurus. Dinosaurs discovered in the Dark Red Beds include the theropod Sinosaurus triassicus, the "prosauropods" "Gyposaurus", Lufengosaurus, and Yunnanosaurus, indeterminate remains of sauropods, and the early armored dinosaurs Bienosaurus and Tatisaurus.

Paleofauna[]

Crurotarsans[]

Crurotarsans reported from the Lower Lufeng Series
Genus Species Location Stratigraphic position Material Notes

Dianchungosaurus[1]

D. lufengensis[1]

Yunnan[1]

Dark Red Beds[1]

Formerly considered an ornithopod dinosaur.

Ornithischians[]

Indeterminate ornithopod remains Yunnan. Dark Red Beds.[2]


Ornithischians reported from the Lower Lufeng Series
Genus Species Location Stratigraphic position Material Notes

Bienosaurus[1]

B. lufengensis[1]

Yunnan[1]

Dark Red Beds[1]

A right "[d]entary with teeth,"[3] with additional cranial fragments such as a partial frontal. These specimens are catalogued as IVPP V 9612. The dentary preserves 11 teeth or roots with two additional empty alveoli.

Tatisaurus[1]

T. oehleri[1]

Yunnan[1]

Dark Red Beds[1]

"Isolated dentary."[3]

Sauropodomorphs[]

Template:Paleobiota-key-compact

Sauropodomorphs reported from the Lower Lufeng Series
Genus Species Location Stratigraphic position Material Notes Images

Chuxiongosaurus[4]

C. lufengensis[4]

Yunnan[4]

"Skull[4]

File:Gyposaurus-outline-basicidea.svg

"Gyposaurus" sinensis

Jingshanosaurus

Lufengosaurus

Yunnanosaurus

Gyposaurus[5]

G. sinensis[5]

Yunnan[5]

  • Dark Red Beds[1]
  • Dull Purplish Beds[6]

"[Two] skeletons, [one] with partial skull, [two] partial skeletons, [three] skull fragments, adult."[7]

Fulengia[1]

F. youngi[1]

Yunnan[1]

  • Dark Red Beds[1]

"Skull."[8]

Jingshanosaurus[6]

J. xinwaensis[6]

Yunnan[6]

  • Dull Purplish Beds[6]

"Complete skeleton with skull, adult."[7]

Kunmingosaurus[1]

K. wusdingensis[1]

Yunnan[1]

  • Dark Red Beds[1]

Lufengosaurus[5]

L. huenei[5]

Yunnan[5]

  • Dark Red Beds[1]
  • Dull Purplish[6]

"(including Gyposaurus sinensis, L. magnus)"[2]

L. magnus[5]

Yunnan[5]

  • Dark Red Beds[1]
  • Dull Purplish[6]

Tawasaurus[1]

T. minor[1]

Yunnan[1]

  • Dark Red Beds[1]

Yunnanosaurus[5]

Y. huangi[5]

Yunnan[5]

  • Dark Red Beds[1]
  • Dull Purplish[6]

"More than [twenty] partial to complete skeletons, [two] skulls, juvenile to adult."[8]

Y. robustus[5]

Yunnan[5]

  • Dark Red Beds[1]
  • Dull Purplish[6]

Theropods[]

Theropods reported from the Lower Lufeng Formation
Genus Species Location Stratigraphic position Material Notes Images

Eshanosaurus[6]

E. deguchiianus[6]

Yunnan[6]

  • Dull Purplish Beds[6]

"Dentary."[9]

Possible therizinosaur

Sinosaurus triassicus

Sinosaurus triassicus

Lukousaurus[5]

L. yini[5]

Yunnan[5]

  • Dark Red Beds[1]
  • Dull Purplish Beds[6]
  • holotype skull, tooth[10]
  • Three bone fragments[11]

Possible crocodylomorph[12]

Sinosaurus[5]

S. triassicus[5]

Yunnan[5]

  • Dark Red Beds[1]
  • Dull Purplish Beds[6]
  • maxillary fragments, teeth, a lower jaw fragment
  • incomplete skull and other post-cranial fragments

Dilophosaurus sinensis specimen

now included with Sinosaurus

Tritylodonts[]

Tritylodonts reported from the Lower Lufeng Series
Genus Species Location Stratigraphic position Material Notes

Yunnanodon[13][14]

Y. brevirostre[13]

Yunnan[13]

  • Dark Red Beds

Mammaliforms[]

Mammaliaforms reported from the Lower Lufeng Series
Genus Species Location Stratigraphic position Material Notes Images

Hadrocodium[15]

H. wui[15]

Yunnan[15]

  • Dark Red Beds
Skull Oldest and one of smallest mammaliaforms known. Indicates a correlation between the separation of the middle ear bones from the mandible and the expanded brain vault in early mammals.[16]

See also[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae "48.3 Yunnan, People's Republic of China; 2. Dark Red Beds of the Lower Lufeng Series," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 534.
  2. ^ a b Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named earlyjurassicdistribution
  3. ^ a b "Table 15.1," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 336.
  4. ^ a b c d Lü Junchang, Yoshitsugu Kobayashi, Li Tianguang and Zhong Shimin (2010). "A New Basal Sauropod Dinosaur from the Lufeng Basin, Yunnan Province, Southwestern China". Acta Geologica Sinica (English Edition) 84 (6): 1336–1342. http://www.geojournals.cn/dzxben/ch/reader/view_abstract.aspx?file_no=201006003&flag=1. 
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s "48.3 Yunnan, People's Republic of China; 1. Dull Purplish Beds of the Lower Lufeng Series and 2. Dark Red Beds of the Lower Lufeng Series" in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 534.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "48.3 Yunnan, People's Republic of China; 1. Dull Purplish Beds of the Lower Lufeng Series," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 534.
  7. ^ a b "Table 12.1," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 234.
  8. ^ a b "Table 12.1," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 236.
  9. ^ "Table 7.1," in Weishampel, et al. (2004). Page 152.
  10. ^ C.C. Young. 1948. Further notes on Gyposaurus sinensis Young. Bulletin of the Geological Society of China 28(1-2):91-103
  11. ^ M. N. Bien. 1940. Discovery of Triassic saurischian and primitive mammalian remains at Lufeng, Yunnan. Bulletin of the Geological Society of China 20(3/4):225-234
  12. ^ R. B. Irmis. 2004. First report of Megapnosaurus (Theropoda: Coelophysoidea) from China. PaleoBios 24(3):11-18
  13. ^ a b c Cui (1976), Yunnania, a new tritylodont genus from Lufeng, Yunnan. Vertebrata PalAsiatica 25, p.1-7.
  14. ^ Cui (1986), Yunnanodon, a replacement name for Yunnania Cui, 1976. Gu Jizhui Dongwu yu Gu Renlei (Vertebr. PalAsiatica 24), p.9.
  15. ^ a b c Luo, Zhe-Xi; Crompton, Alfred W.; Sun, Ai-Lin (2001). "A New Mammaliaform from the Early Jurassic and Evolution of Mammalian Characteristics (Supplementary Information (Hadrocodium wui IVPP8275)". Science 292 (5521): 1535–1540. doi:10.1126/science.1058476. PMID 11375489. Bibcode: 2001Sci...292.1535L. https://www.sciencemag.org/content/suppl/2001/05/23/292.5521.1535.DC1/LuoSupple_Inf.pdf. Retrieved on April 2013. 
  16. ^ Luo, Zhe-Xi; Crompton, Alfred W.; Sun, Ai-Lin (2001). "A New Mammaliaform from the Early Jurassic and Evolution of Mammalian Characteristics". Science 292 (5521): 1535–1540. doi:10.1126/science.1058476. PMID 11375489. Bibcode: 2001Sci...292.1535L. http://www.bi.ku.dk/dna/course/papers/J1.luo.pdf.