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#Mochlodon suessi
dinodorks · 9 months
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[ A size comparison of three rhabdodontids, (left to right) Mochlodon suessi, Rhabdodon priscus and Transylvanosaurus platycephalus. Illustrated by Peter Nickolaus. ]
"When you think of dinosaurs, you might automatically imagine iconic dinosaurs such as Tyrannosaurus and Triceratops. But at the same time when these were stomping on the ancient coastal plains of North America, some of their very distant cousins were reigning over Europe's lands. During the Late Cretaceous (between 100 and 66 million years ago), Europe was an extensive archipelago with numerous small and large islands situated in a shallow tropical sea, the so-called Late Cretaceous European Archipelago. The dinosaur groups that lived on these islands were very different from those of other continents, often being much smaller than their mainland relatives. These European dinosaurs include small and medium-sized carnivorous theropods, armored ankylosaurs, long-necked sauropods, duck-billed hadrosaurs, and rhabdodontids. Arguably one of the most important of these European dinosaur groups is the family Rhabdodontidae, which groups together the most common medium-sized herbivores of the Late Cretaceous European Archipelago. A joint research team from the Universities of Tübingen (Germany), Budapest (Hungary) and Bucharest (Romania) recently reviewed what we know about these peculiar dinosaurs in a new paper published in the journal Fossil Record."
Read more: "Europe's very own dinosaurs: The enigmatic Late Cretaceous rhabdodontids"
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a-dinosaur-a-day · 8 years
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Mochlodon suessi, M. vorosi
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By Jack Wood on @thewoodparable
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Name: Mochlodon suessi, M. vorosi
Name Meaning: Bar Tooth 
First Described: 1881
Described By: Seeley
Classification: Dinosauria, Ornithischia, Genasauria, Neornithischia, Cerapoda, Ornithopoda 
Mochlodon is an Ornithopod typically described as being in the family Rhabdodontidae, however, that family has since been found to not be naturally monophyletic. M. suessi is known from the jaw, some vertebrae, and othe rscattered remains; M. vorosi is even more poorly known. It was found in the Coal Bearing Complex Formation in the Gosau Group in Austria, dating back the Campanian age of the Late Cretaceous, around 80 million years ago. It was a bipedal herbivore, fairly small for its group. 
Sources:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mochlodon
Shout out goes to @kenziehallthings!
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