База данных динозавров:
Общее количество образцов: 1365name | Tenontosaurus (Тенонтозавр) |
period | Cretaceous (Меловой период) |
period_mya | 66 |
date_from | 125.45 million years ago |
date_to | Turonian Age (Туронский ярус) |
date_from2 | 125.45 |
date_to2 | 89.8 |
lived_in | a sediment (осадок) |
was_a | herbivore (травоядные) |
reproduced_by | laying eggs (откладывание яиц) |
url | https://dinosaurpictures.org/Tenontosaurus-pictures |
articles | P. M. Gignac and P. J. Makovicky. 2010. A description of Deinonychus antirrhopus bite marks and estimates of bite force using tooth indentation simulations. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 30(4):1169-1177 B. H. Slaughter. 1965. A therian from the Lower Cretaceous (Albian) of Texas. Postilla 93:1-18 V. L. Santucci and J. I. Kirkland. 2010. An Overview of National Park Service Paleontological Resources from the Parks and Monuments in Utah. In D. A. Sprinkel, T. C. Chidsey, P. B. Anderson (eds.), Utah Geological Association Publication 28 (third edition) 28:589-623 P. M. Galton and J. A. Jensen. 1979. Remains of ornithopod dinosaurs from the Lower Cretaceous of North America. Brigham Young University Geology Studies 25(3):1-10 Anonymous. 1965. Paleontology. The dinosaur's claws. Yale Alumni Magazine 1965:17 Anonymous. 1966. On the track of dinosaurs. Nature and Science 4(1):6-8 D. A. Winkler and P. A. Murry. 1997. A new species of Tenontosaurus (Dinosauria: Ornithopoda) from the Early Cretaceous of Texas. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 17(2):330-348 J. H. Ostrom. 1970. Stratigraphy and paleontology of the Cloverly Formation (Lower Cretaceous) of the Bighorn Basin area, Wyoming and Montana. Peabody Museum Bulletin 35:1-234 Anonymous. 1931. Dinosaur skeleton from Montana. Natural History 31:559 M. P. J. Oreska and M. T. Carrano. 2013. Vertebrate paleontology of the Cloverly Formation (Lower Cretaceous), I: faunal composition, biogeographic relationships, and sampling. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 33(2):264-292 R. L. Cifelli. 1997. First notice on Mesozoic mammals from Oklahoma. Oklahoma Geology Notes 57(1):4-17 B. Patterson. 1955. A symmetrodont from the Early Cretaceous of northern Texas. Fieldiana: Zoology 37:689-693 W. D. Maxwell and J. H. Ostrom. 1995. Taphonomy and paleobiological implications of Tenontosaurus-Deinonychus associations. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 15(4):707-712 T. R. Lipka. 1998. The affinities of the enigmatic theropods of the Arundel Clay facies (Aptian), Potomac Formation, Atlantic Coastal Plain of Maryland. In S. G. Lucas, J. I. Kirkland, J. W. Estep (eds.), Lower and Middle Cretaceous Terrestrial Ecosystems; New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 14:229-234 J. H. Ostrom. 1965. Cretaceous vertebrate faunas of Wyoming. Wyoming Geological Association Guidebook 19:35-41 H. W. Miller, Jr. 1964. Cretaceous dinosaurian remains from southern Arizona. Journal of Paleontology 38(2):378-384 R. L. Cifelli and J. D. Gardner. 1997. Additions to the vertebrate fauna of the Antlers Formation (Lower Cretaceous), southeastern Oklahoma. Oklahoma Geology Notes 57(4):124-131 J. I. Kirkland and B. Britt. 1997. Lower to Middle Cretaceous dinosaur faunas of the central Colorado Plateau: a key to understanding 35 million years of tectonics, sedimentology, evolution and biogeography. Brigham Young University Geology Studies 42(2):69-103 J. H. Ostrom. 1969. A new theropod dinosaur from the Lower Cretaceous of Montana. Postilla 128:1-17 R. Moore and H. W. Miller. 1960. A dinosaur-bearing section of Cretaceous rocks in the Empire Mountains, Pima County, Arizona. Arizona Geological Society Digest 3:57-61 J. A. Dorr, Jr. 1985. Newfound Early Cretaceous dinosaurs and other fossils in southeastern Idaho and westernmost Wyoming. Contributions from the Museum of Paleontology, University of Michigan 27(3):73-85 W. Langston. 1974. Nonmammalian Comanchean tetrapods. In B. F. Perkins (ed.), Aspects of Trinity Division Geology. A Symposium on the Stratigraphy, Sedimentary Environments, and Fauna of the Comanche Cretaceous Trinity Division (Aptian and Albian) of Texas and Northern Mexico. Geoscience and Man 8:77-102 |
trophic_level | herbivore (травоядные) |
habitat | sediment (осадок) |
motility | actively mobile (подвижный) |
points | 34.4 -96.1, 33.2833 -97.6167, 33.5002 -97.5827, 34.4 -96.1, 45.439 -108.141, 45.4414 -108.162, 31.8392 -110.681, 31.8392 -110.492, 46.3375 -109.686, 39.1695 -76.7879, 45.4414 -108.162, 45.4857 -108.517, 44.4944 -107.855, 44.964 -108.302, 44.9782 -108.322, 45.439 -108.08, 45.4244 -108.08, 45.4097 -108.203, 45.3951 -108.224, 45.3805 -108.203, 45.3805 -108.244, 45.1242 -108.71, 45.153 -108.73, 45.1974 -108.811, 43.1905 -107.694, 45.3559 -108.812, 45.3412 -108.811, 45.3412 -108.811, 45.2405 -108.811, 44.9782 -108.322, 44.9782 -108.343, 45.4536 -108.1, 45.439 -108.141, 45.3805 -108.265, 45.3805 -108.285, 45.3805 -108.285, 45.4097 -108.038, 45.4097 -108.038, 45.3513 -108.1, 45.3513 -108.1, 45.3513 -108.1, 45.2837 -108.811, 45.2837 -108.811, 46.2714 -109.895, 45.439 -108.141, 45.439 -108.141, 45.439 -108.141, 45.439 -108.141, 45.4536 -108.1, 46.3375 -109.706, 45.439 -108.162, 45.439 -108.162, 45.439 -108.141, 45.439 -108.141, 45.439 -108.141, 45.2262 -108.811, 45.2262 -108.811, 45.2262 -108.811, 45.2262 -108.811, 45.2262 -108.811, 45.4682 -108.121, 46.323 -109.706, 46.323 -109.706, 46.323 -109.706, 45.3413 -108.811, 32.7556 -97.8939, 42.9748 -111.27, 39.179 -110.106, 39.0709 -76.8685, 44.6586 -107.894, 38.5019 -111.245, 44.5133 -107.902, 45.1928 -108.805, 45.2392 -108.798, 34.4 -96.1, 33.192 -97.4342, |