About: Hesperonychus   Sponge Permalink

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Hesperonychus was a small dromeosaurid that lived in Late Cretaceous Alberta, Canada.

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  • Hesperonychus
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  • Hesperonychus was a small dromeosaurid that lived in Late Cretaceous Alberta, Canada.
  • Hesperonychus is known from one partial pelvic girdle, holotype specimen UALVP 48778, collected by Dr. Elizabeth Nicholls in Dinosaur Provincial Park in 1982. The fossil remained undescribed, however, until Nick Longrich and Phil Currie published on it in 2009. A number of very small toe bones, including "sickle claws", in the collection of the Royal Tyrrell Museum may also belong to Hesperonychus. Despite their small size, the pubic bones were fused, a characteristic of adult dinosaurs, indicating that the specimen does not represent a juvenile of a known species.
  • Hesperonychus (meaning "west claw") is an extinct genus of small, carnivorous dromaeosaurid dinosaur. There is one described species, Hesperonychus elizabethae; the type species was named in honor of the woman who collected it in 1982. It is known from fossils recovered from the Dinosaur Park Formation of Alberta, Canada, dating to the Late Cretaceous Period (Campanian stage) about 75 million years ago).
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Range
Name
  • Hesperonychus
fossil range
  • Late Cretaceous, 75 Ma
imagewidth
  • 260(xsd:integer)
Species
  • (Longrich & Currie, 2009 )
  • * H. elizabethae
Att
  • Similar to other dromaeosaurs
Genus
  • (Longrich & Currie, 2009)
  • Hesperonychus
Class
Suborder
  • Theropoda
Subfamily
Family
Order
Time
  • Late Cretaceous
Diet
  • Carnivore
Superorder
  • Dinosauria
abstract
  • Hesperonychus (meaning "west claw") is an extinct genus of small, carnivorous dromaeosaurid dinosaur. There is one described species, Hesperonychus elizabethae; the type species was named in honor of the woman who collected it in 1982. It is known from fossils recovered from the Dinosaur Park Formation of Alberta, Canada, dating to the Late Cretaceous Period (Campanian stage) about 75 million years ago). Hesperonychus is known from one partial pelvic girdle, collected by Dr. Elizabeth Nicholls in Dinosaur Provincial Park in 1982. The fossils remained undescribed, however, until Nick Longrich and Phil Currie published on them in 2009. A number of very small finger and toe bones, as well as claws, in the collection of the Royal Tyrrell Museum may also belong to Hesperonychus. Despite their small size, the pubic bones were fused, a characteristic of adult dinosaurs, indicating that the specimen does not represent a juvenile. Though known from only partial remains, Longrich and Currie estimated its total length at under 1 meter and weight at about 1.9 kilograms, making it the smallest known carnivorous dinosaur from North America. The alvarezsaurid Albertonykus was smaller, though likely an insectivore rather than a carnivore.
  • Hesperonychus was a small dromeosaurid that lived in Late Cretaceous Alberta, Canada.
  • Hesperonychus is known from one partial pelvic girdle, holotype specimen UALVP 48778, collected by Dr. Elizabeth Nicholls in Dinosaur Provincial Park in 1982. The fossil remained undescribed, however, until Nick Longrich and Phil Currie published on it in 2009. A number of very small toe bones, including "sickle claws", in the collection of the Royal Tyrrell Museum may also belong to Hesperonychus. Despite their small size, the pubic bones were fused, a characteristic of adult dinosaurs, indicating that the specimen does not represent a juvenile of a known species. Though known from only partial remains, Longrich and Currie estimated its total length at under one meter and weight at about 1.9 kilograms, making it the smallest known carnivorous dinosaur from North America. The alvarezsaurid Albertonykus was smaller, though likely an insectivore rather than a carnivore
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