База данных динозавров:
Общее количество образцов: 1365name | Coelophysis (Целофиз) |
period | Jurassic (Юрский период) |
period_mya | 150 |
date_from | Upper Triassic Epoch (Поздний триас) |
date_to | 182.7 million years ago |
date_from2 | 237 |
date_to2 | 182.7 |
lived_in | a terrestrial habitat (наземная среда обитания) |
was_a | carnivore (хищники) |
reproduced_by | laying eggs (откладывание яиц) |
url | https://dinosaurpictures.org/Coelophysis-pictures |
description | At three feet tall and nine feet long, with a body weight of some 30 pounds, Coelophysis is a dainty dinosaur from the Triassic, before heavyweight forms began to evolve. She had small, but still-useful forelimbs, and the first wishbone known to paleontology. The experts suspect that she was a sharp-eyed, fleet-footed predator of small game with excellent depth perception. There are many good samples from Ghost Ranch in New Mexico – and one distant relative from Zimbabwe in central Africa: Coelophysis rhodesiensis. |
articles | D. Munyikwa and M. A. Raath. 1999. Further material of the ceratosaurian dinosaur Syntarsus from the Elliot Formation (Early Jurassic) of South Africa. Palaeontologia Africana 35:55-59 M. Talbot. 1911. Podokesaurus holyokensis, a new dinosaur from the Triassic of the Connecticut Valley. American Journal of Science 31(186):469-479 U.C.M.P. Database. 2005. UCMP collections database. University of California Museum of Paleontology K. Padian. 1986. On the type material of Coelophysis Cope (Saurischia: Theropoda) and a new specimen from the Petrified Forest of Arizona (Late Triassic: Chinle Formation). In K. Padian (ed.), The Beginning of the Age of Dinosaurs: Faunal Change Across the Triassic–Jurassic Boundary. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge G. Bond. 1965. Some new fossil localities in the Karroo System of Rhodesia. Arnoldia, Series of Miscellaneous Publications, National Museum of Southern Rhodesia 2(11):1-4 R. M. Sullivan and S.G. Lucas. 1996. The type locality of Coelophysis, a Late Triassic dinosaur from north-central New Mexico (USA). Paläontologische Zeitschrift 70(1/2):245-255 W. Parker and R. B. Irmis. 2005. Advances in Late Triassic vertebrate paleontology based on new material from Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona. Vertebrate Paleontology in Arizona, New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 29:45-58 W. Oakes and S. G. Lucas. 1986. Triassic cynodont (Reptilia) from New Mexico. New Mexico Geology 8(1):22 P. M. Galton. 1976. Prosauropod dinosaurs (Reptilia: Saurischia) of North America. Postilla 169:1-98 M. A. Raath. 1977. The Anatomy of the Triassic Theropod Syntarsus rhodesiensis (Saurischia: Podokesauridae) and a Consideration of Its Biology. Department of Zoology and Entomology, Rhodes University, Salisbury, Rhodesia A. P. Hunt and J. Wright. 1999. New discoveries of Late Triassic dinosaurs from Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona. In V. L. Santucci & L. McClelland (eds.), National Park Service Geologic Resources Division Technical Report NPS/NRGRD/GRDTR-99/03. National Park Service Paleontological Research Volume 4:96-100 T. M. Lehman and S. Chatterjee. 2005. Depositional setting and vertebrate biostratigraphy of the Triassic Dockum Group of Texas. Journal of Earth Systems Science 114(3):325-351 G. Bond. 1972. Milestones in Rhodesian paleontology (1901–1971). Transactions of the Geological Society of South Africa 75(2):151-158 E. D. Cope. 1887. The dinosaurian genus Coelurus. American Naturalist 21:367-369 A. B. Heckert and K. E. Zeigler. 2000. Preliminary description of coelophysoids (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from the Upper Triassic (Revueltian: early-mid Norian) Snyder Quarry, north-central New Mexico. In S. G. Lucas and A. B. Heckert (eds.), Dinosaurs of New Mexico. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 17:27-32 E. H. Colbert. 1947. The little dinosaurs of Ghost Ranch. Natural History 59(9):392-399-427-428 M. A. Raath. 1972. First record of dinosaur footprints from Rhodesia. Arnoldia 5(37):1-5 T. Rowe. 1989. A new species of the theropod dinosaur Syntarsus from the Early Jurassic Kayenta Formation of Arizona. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 9(2):125-136 M. A. Raath. 1968. Rhodesian dinosaurs in a southern African context. The Rhodesia Science News 2(6):89-91 R. F. Dubiel and S. C. Good. 1989. Sedimentology and paleontology of the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation, Bedrock, Colorado. The Mountain Geologist 26(4):113-126 B. Patterson and E. C. Olson. 1961. A triconodont mammal from the Triassic of Yunnan. In G. Vandebroek (ed.), International Colloquium on the Evolution of Lower and Non Specialized Mammals. Koninklijke Vlaamse Academir voor Wetenschappen, Letteren en Schone Kunsten can Belgie S. W. Williston and E. C. Case. 1912. The Permo-Carboniferous of northern New Mexico. Journal of Geology 20:1-12 E. C. Case. 1922. New reptiles and stegocephalians from the Upper Triassic of western Texas. Carnegie Institute of Washington Publication 221:1-84 E. H. Colbert. 1989. The Triassic dinosaur Coelophysis. Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin 57:1-174 A. R. C. Milner and M. G. Lockley. 2006. History, geology and paleontology: St. George Dinosaur Discovery Site at Johnson Farm, Utah. In R. E. Reynolds (ed.), Making Tracks Across the Southwest: The 2006 Desert Symposium |
trophic_level | carnivore (хищники) |
habitat | terrestrial habitat (наземные среды обитания) |
motility | actively mobile (подвижный) |
points | -16.2167 30.1, 42.2556 -72.575, -19.8 28.5833, 35.6942 -111.014, 35.6942 -111.014, 35.6792 -111.028, 33.5 -101.133, -28.35 25.68, 41.3972 -72.7667, -19.9667 28.4097, 36.3317 -106.473, 35.0333 -109.833, -16.1167 29.5, -16.2167 30.1, 36.2053 -106.339, 36.313 -106.446, 36.313 -106.446, 36.313 -106.446, 36.313 -106.446, 36.313 -106.446, 36.313 -106.446, 36.313 -106.446, 36.313 -106.446, 36.2053 -106.339, 36.3393 -106.874, 34.9792 -104.151, 35.1109 -109.834, 35.125 -109.808, 36.3317 -106.473, 36.3317 -106.473, 33.0125 -101.352, 33.6064 -101.139, 25.1727 102.107, 37.1017 -113.536, 38.2931 -108.907, |