Avimimus
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Extinct (fossil)
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Avimimus portentosus Kurzanov, 1981 |
Avimimus (ay-vih-MY-mus) meaning "bird mimic", because it resembled a bird (Latin avis = bird + mimus = mimic) was a birdlike dinosaur that lived in the late Cretaceous in what is now Mongolia, around 75 million years ago.
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[edit] Morphology
Avimimus was a small dinosaur, standing about 2.5 feet tall at the hips. The skull was relatively small compared to the body. As in the related Oviraptoridae and Caenagnathidae, the jaws of Avimimus formed a parrot-like beak, and lacked teeth. However, a series of toothlike projections along the tip of the premaxilla would have given the beak a serrated edge. The neck was long and slender; the neck vertebrae are much more elongate than in other oviraptorosaurs. Unlike oviraptorids and caenagnathids, the back vertebrae lack openings for air sacks, suggesting that Avimimus is more primitive than these animals. The forelimbs were relatively short. The bones of the hand were fused together, as in modern birds, and a ridge on the ulna was interpreted as an attachment point for feathers by Kurzanov. The ilium was almost horizontally oriented, resulting in exceptionally broad hips. The legs were extremely long and slender, suggesting that Avimimus was a highly specialized runner.
[edit] Biology
The beak of Avimimus suggests that it may have been an herbivore or omnivore.
[edit] Discovery and species
Its remains were discovered in the Djadokta Formation and officially described by Dr Sergi Kurzanov in 1981 Avimimus species
- A. portentosus
In 1991, Sankar Chatterjee erected the Order Avimimiformes to include Avimimus, though this group is not used by most paleontologists today as it includes only a single species.
[edit] References
- Kurzanov, S.M. (1981). "An unusual theropod from the Upper Cretaceous of Mongolia Iskopayemyye pozvonochnyye Mongolii (Fossil Vertebrates of Mongolia)." Trudy Sovmestnay Sovetsko-Mongolskay Paleontologiyeskay Ekspeditsiy (Joint Soviet-Mongolian Paleontological Expedition), 15: 39-49. Nauka Moscow, 1981