Ajkaceratops

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Ajkaceratops
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous, Santonian
Ajkaceratops.jpg
Holotype fused rostral and premaxillae
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Order: Ornithischia
Parvorder: Coronosauria
Family: Bagaceratopsidae
Genus: †Ajkaceratops
Ősi et al., 2010
Species:
† A. kozmai
Binomial name
Ajkaceratops kozmai
Ősi et al., 2010
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Ajkaceratops (pronounced "oi-ka-sera-tops") is a genus of ceratopsian dinosaur described in 2010. It lived during the Late Cretaceous in what is now Europe, in what was then the western Tethyan archipelago. The type species, A. kozmai,[1] is most closely related to forms in east Asia, from where its ancestors may have migrated by island-hopping. The generic name, Ajkaceratops, honors Ajka, a town in Hungary near Iharkút, where the fossils were discovered, combined with the Greek ceratops, meaning "horned face". The specific name, "kozmai", honors Károly Kozma.[1]

Description

Restoration

The holotype, cataloged as MTM V2009.192.1, consists only of a few skull fragments, including rostral bones, fused premaxillae, and maxillae fragments (the beak and jaw fragments). These fossils are kept in the Hungarian Natural History Museum, in Budapest. Although the fossils are fragmentary, the paper describing Ajkaceratops estimated a body length of 1 m (3.3 ft).[1] Other material includes four predentary bones, cataloged as MTM V2009.193.1, V2009.194.1, V2009.195.1, and V2009.196.1; these are also believed to have belonged to Ajkaceratops, although they are proportionately smaller, and probably came from other individuals of the genus.[1]

Scale bar 10 cm

Classification

The fossils most closely resemble those of Asian bagaceratopsids Bagaceratops and Magnirostris. Those similarities indicate Ajkaceratops is a ceratopsian related to the bagaceratopsids, but more primitive than Zuniceratops and the Ceratopsidae.[1]

Paleobiology

The fossils of Ajkaceratops were discovered in the Csehbánya Formation, which is interpreted as "a floodplain and channel deposit formed by variegated clay, silt with interbedded grey and brown sand, and sandstone beds". This strata dates to the Santonian stage, around 86 to 84 mya (million years ago). Ajkaceratops shared its environment with other dinosaurs such as Rhabdodon, nodosaurid ankylosaurs, and theropods, as well as non-dinosaurian eusuchian crocodiles, azhdarchid pterosaurs, bothremydid turtles, teiid lizards, and enantiornithine birds.[2]

See also

References

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