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Theropod dinosaurs from the Albian–Cenomanian Wayan Formation of eastern Idaho
24
Citations
47
References
2016
Year
BiologyTheropod DinosaursPaleoenvironmental ReconstructionMorphological EvidencePhylogeneticsLiving FossilNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyCretaceous PeriodCenomanian Wayan FormationRare EggsGeochronologyPaleobotanySynapsidaCenomanian Environments
The record of terrestrial vertebrates in the upper Albian to Cenomanian Wayan Formation of Idaho is sparse, with most fossils recovered belonging to the small orodromine neornithischian Oryctodromeus cubicularis and the maniraptoran ootaxon Macroelongatoolithus carlylei. Here we report on a diversity of theropod forms now recognised from various isolated teeth, vertebrae, eggs and eggshell. Theropods recognised from isolated teeth include a large possible tyrannosauroid, a small tyrannosauroid, dromaeosaurids, and indeterminate theropods. A possible neovenatorid and indeterminate theropods are recognised from isolated vertebrae. A giant oviraptorosaur is indicated by the presence of rare eggs and common eggshell accumulations referred to Macroelongatoolithus. While these remains are admittedly meager, their presence indicates that a substantial diversity of theropods existed in the Albian to Cenomanian environments of southeastern Idaho. The Wayan theropod assemblage is among the most diverse reported for this time period in North America, and represents a transitional assemblage resembling that of the later Late Cretaceous.
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