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Bolong

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Genus of reptiles (fossil)
For other uses, seeBolong (disambiguation).

Bolong
Life restoration
Scientific classificationEdit this classification
Domain:Eukaryota
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Clade:Dinosauria
Clade:Ornithischia
Clade:Ornithopoda
Clade:Hadrosauriformes
Superfamily:Hadrosauroidea
Genus:Bolong
Wu, Godefroit & Hu,2010
Species:
B. yixianensis
Binomial name
Bolong yixianensis
Wu, Godefroit & Hu, 2010

Bolong (meaning "Bo's dragon") is agenus ofiguanodontiandinosaur known from theEarly Cretaceous-ageYixian Formation of westernLiaoning Province,China.[1] It lived about 125 million years ago in the earliestAptian.[1]

Discovery and naming

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It was named by Wu Wen-hao,Pascal Godefroit and Hu Dong-yu in2010.[1] The type species isBolong yixianensis.[1] The genus name is derived from the names of the brothers Bo Hai-chen and Bo Xue, who helped uncover it, and the Mandarin word 龍lóng "dragon". The specific epithet refers to theYixian Formation where it was found.[1]

Theholotype fossil,YHZ-001, consists of a nearly complete skeleton.[1]

In 2013 a second specimen (ZMNH-M8812) was described consisting of an almost complete skeleton of a very young animal. It was found by a farmer near the village ofXitaizhi inInner Mongolia.[2]

Description

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Bolong was a relatively small animal with an estimated length of four meters and a weight of 200 kilograms. The head is convex and fairly stocky with powerful mandibles. The teeth are relatively large.Autapomorphies that have been established are a cavity at the interface of the lacrimal bone, the maxilla, the backwards branch of the prefrontal bone, consisting of a front-to-rear depth cavity above the edges of the eye socket, the lower protrusion of the predentarium extending rearwardly parallel to the lower edge, the interface of the predentarium that occupies less than two-thirds of the height of the dentarium so that the front tip of the dentarium protrudes a third above the predentarium, and that the teeth in the maxilla have dental crowns of which the main ridge bends at the tip of the tooth.[1]

A second autapomorphy was identified based on the second specimen: the inside of the maxillary teeth are thickened and enclosed from the front and rear cutting edges and is divided in half by a striking vertical ledge.[2]

The gait ofBolong is disputed. The forelimb was fairly short, and the wrist bones were not fused together, suggesting that the forelimb was not well-adapted to bearing much weight, though the proportions of the distal forelimb are reminiscent of quadrupeds.[3] This suggests thatBolong was a facultative quadruped that spent much of its time walking bipedally,[3] which is also suggested by the relative proportions of the thigh and shin.[4] However, the hind foot was short and robust, more like fully quadrupedal dinosaurs than bipedal ones.[3] Very young individuals had a proportionally longer forelimb, typical of the proportions of quadrupedal animals.[2]

Phylogeny

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The describers placedBolong in Hadrosauroidea. It would have been one of the mostbasal hadrosauroids found inAsia.[1]

References

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  1. ^abcdefghWu Wen-hao; Pascal Godefroit; Hu Dong-yu (2010). "Bolong yixianensis gen. et sp. nov.: A new Iguanodontoid dinosaur from the Yixian Formation of Western Liaoning, China".Geology and Resources.19 (2):127–133.
  2. ^abcZheng, Wenjie; Jin, Xingsheng; Shibata, Masateru; Azuma, Yoichi (4 March 2014). "An early juvenile specimen of Bolong yixianensis (Ornithopoda: Iguanodontia) from the Lower Cretaceous of Ningcheng County, Nei Mongol, China".Historical Biology.26 (2):236–251.Bibcode:2014HBio...26..236Z.doi:10.1080/08912963.2013.809347.
  3. ^abcWenhao, Wu; Godefroit, Pascal (2012). "Anatomy and relationships of Bolong yixianensis, an Early Cretaceous iguanodontoid dinosaur from Western Liaoning, China". In Godefroit, Pascal (ed.).Bernissart dinosaurs and Early Cretaceous terrestrial ecosystems. Indiana University Press. pp. 292–333.ISBN 978-0-253-00570-0.
  4. ^Xu, Xing; Tan, Qingwei; Gao, Yilong; Bao, Zhiqiang; Yin, Zhigang; Guo, Bin; Wang, Junyou; Tan, Lin; Zhang, Yuguang; Xing, Hai (2018). "A large-sized basal ankylopollexian from East Asia, shedding light on early biogeographic history of Iguanodontia".Science Bulletin.63 (9):556–563.Bibcode:2018SciBu..63..556X.doi:10.1016/j.scib.2018.03.016.ISSN 2095-9273.PMID 36658842.
Avemetatarsalia
Ornithischia
Ornithopoda
    • see below↓
Hypsilophodontidae?
Elasmaria
Rhabdodontomorpha
Tenontosauridae?
Rhabdodontidae
Dryosauridae
Hadrosauriformes
Iguanodontidae
Hadrosauroidea
    • see below↓
Notohypsilodon comodorensis

Rhabdodon priscus

Ouranosaurus nigeriensis
Lambeosaurinae
Parasaurolophini
Lambeosaurini
Saurolophinae
Brachylophosaurini
Austrokritosauria
Kritosaurini
Saurolophini
Edmontosaurini
Qianjiangsaurus changshengi

Tlatolophus galorumLambeosaurus lambeiGryposaurus? alsatei

Shantungosaurus giganteus
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Bolong
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