'''Shenzhousaurus''' (Ji et al., 2003) is a basal
ornithomimosaur from the Lower
Cretaceous of
China. The
holotype (NGMC 97-4-002, National Geological Museum of China) was collected from near the bottom (
fluvial beds) of the
Yixian Formation (
Barremian) at the Sihetun fossil site, Beipiao, western
Liaoning Province. This specimen consists of a partial skeleton preserved on a
sandstone slab in a "death pose," its head above the
torso. The
distal parts of the hindlimbs, distal portion of the tail, and the
forelimbs (except for part of the right hand) and the
pectoral girdle are missing. The head is crushed, exposing the left side obliquely. The
genus is currently
monotypic (
type species, ''S. orientalis'') and appears to be more derived than ''
Pelecanimimus polyodon'', yet less derived than ''
Harpymimus oklandikovi''. It may be distinguished from the latter by its "straight ischial shaft and acuminateposterior end of the
ilium" (Makovicky et al., 2004), and from all other ornithomimosaurs excepting ''Harpymimus'' by the relative length of
metacarpal I (only half that of metacarpal II) and in that its reduced
dentition is restricted to the symphyseal portion of the
dentary. The holotype skull measure 185 mm. A number of
pebbles found in the
thoracic cavity have been interpreted as
gastroliths.
References
★ Ji, Q., Norrell, M., Makovicky, P. J., Gao, K., Ji, S., et Yuan, C. 2003. An Early Ostrich Dinosaur and Implications for Ornithomimosaur Phylogeny. ''American Museum Novitates'': No. 3420, pp.1-19.
★ Makovicky, P. J., Kobayashi, Y., et Currie, P. J. 2004. Chapter Six: Ornithomimosauria. in ''The Dinosauria'' (2nd edition), Weishampel, D. B., Dodson, P., and Osmólska, H., editors. University of California Press.
External links
★ dinosaur.net.cn
[1] (includes images of specimen and a life restoration)