About: Segnosaurus   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Due to fragmentary remains and a very unusual body style, the exact size of Segnosaurus is uncertain.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Segnosaurus
  • Segnosaurus
rdfs:comment
  • Escribe la primera sección de tu artículo aquí.
  • Due to fragmentary remains and a very unusual body style, the exact size of Segnosaurus is uncertain.
  • In 1973 a Soviet-Mongolian expedition near Amtgay uncovered the fossil of a theropod. In 1974 and 1975 more such remains were discovered, at the same site but also near Khara-Khutul. The type species, Segnosaurus galbinensis, was named and described in 1979 by Dr. Altangerel Perle. The generic name is derived from Latin segnis meaning 'slow' or 'sluggish' and Greek sauros meaning 'lizard', in reference to the stocky build of the hindlimbs. The specific name refers to the Galbin region.[1]
  • Real Segnosaurus were very unusual dinosaurs - they are therizinosaurs ("scythe lizards"), large, bulky, toothless sloth-like dinosaurs with hooked claws which lived during the Cretaceous period. While they belonged to the theropod family of largely meat-eating dinosaurs, therizinosaurs are thought to have been herbivores by most scientists. The claws, although they seemed fearsome, would only have been used to pull down branches so that the dinosaur could feed. Other scientists think that Segnosaurus and its relatives were insectivores, using their claws to open termite mounds. Segnosaurus may have reached 4- 9 metres in length. It may have had feathers covering its body, similar to modern birds, as feathers have been observed in the related therizinosaur Beipiaosaurus. The name Segnosaur
  • Segnosaurus was a rather large therizinosaurid. In 2010 Gregory S. Paul estimated the body length at 6 metres (19.5 ft), the weight at 1.3 tonnes. Segnosaurus had an elongated head, large clawed hands, a somewhat elevated torso, a broad strong pelvis, stocky legs and a short tail.
sameAs
Length
  • 8.0
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:dinosaur-ki...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:jurassic-pa...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:jurassicpar...iPageUsesTemplate
Game
  • Jurassic Park: Builder
  • Jurassic World: The Game
  • Jurassic Park III: Park Builder
birth type
  • Egg
toy
Weight
  • 4(xsd:integer)
Meaning
  • Slow Reptile
dbkwik:dinosaurkin...iPageUsesTemplate
Diet
  • Herbivore
abstract
  • Escribe la primera sección de tu artículo aquí.
  • In 1973 a Soviet-Mongolian expedition near Amtgay uncovered the fossil of a theropod. In 1974 and 1975 more such remains were discovered, at the same site but also near Khara-Khutul. The type species, Segnosaurus galbinensis, was named and described in 1979 by Dr. Altangerel Perle. The generic name is derived from Latin segnis meaning 'slow' or 'sluggish' and Greek sauros meaning 'lizard', in reference to the stocky build of the hindlimbs. The specific name refers to the Galbin region.[1] Four specimens were recovered from the Bayan Shireh Formation of the Mongolian People's Republic, in sediments dated between the Cenomanian to Turonian stages (Late Cretaceous Period, about 93 million years old).[2] These include the holotype, IGM 100/80, a partial skeleton consisting of a mandible, pelvis, right thighbone, scapulocoracoid, incomplete forelimb and sacral and caudal vertebrae; and the paratypes IGM 100/82 and IGM 100/83, both more fragmentary skeletons also lacking the skulls.[1] Later specimen IGM 100/81 was referred, a foot.
  • Segnosaurus was a rather large therizinosaurid. In 2010 Gregory S. Paul estimated the body length at 6 metres (19.5 ft), the weight at 1.3 tonnes. Segnosaurus had an elongated head, large clawed hands, a somewhat elevated torso, a broad strong pelvis, stocky legs and a short tail. Segnosaurus can be distinguished from all other therizinosaurs on the basis of two unique derived traits (autapomorphies). The in total forty-eight mandibular teeth are markedly peg-like and only slightly recurved: the front or mesial edge is curved and the back or distal edge is straight. The second autapomorphy is that the claws of the hand are rather flat instead of very narrow. In the same formation the closely related Erlikosaurus is found; Segnosaurus can be distinguished from this species by its moderate transverse compression of the pedal unguals or foot claws. Also the latero-dorsal shelf on the dentary, a flat bone surface at the upper outside of the lower jaw, starts at the fourteenth dentary tooth position and runs backwards for half the length of the lower jaw, unlike the shelf in Erlikosaurus, which starts at the fifth tooth position. This would have indicated that Segnosaurus did not have as extensive 'cheeks' as Erlikosaurus is believed to have had. In 2016, a study of the lower jaws concluded these were very specialised. They are strongly curved to below and their teeth in many ways differ from those of relatives. They have denticles on the front side, outside of the cutting edges. The rear edge diverged to below, forming a triangular facet near the tooth collar. The three rearmost teeth have a conical form and an extra cutting edge on the inner side.
  • Real Segnosaurus were very unusual dinosaurs - they are therizinosaurs ("scythe lizards"), large, bulky, toothless sloth-like dinosaurs with hooked claws which lived during the Cretaceous period. While they belonged to the theropod family of largely meat-eating dinosaurs, therizinosaurs are thought to have been herbivores by most scientists. The claws, although they seemed fearsome, would only have been used to pull down branches so that the dinosaur could feed. Other scientists think that Segnosaurus and its relatives were insectivores, using their claws to open termite mounds. Segnosaurus may have reached 4- 9 metres in length. It may have had feathers covering its body, similar to modern birds, as feathers have been observed in the related therizinosaur Beipiaosaurus. The name Segnosaurus means "slow lizard".
  • Due to fragmentary remains and a very unusual body style, the exact size of Segnosaurus is uncertain.
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