Jingshanosaurus Explained

Jingshanosaurus (meaning "Jingshan lizard") is a genus of sauropodomorph dinosaurs from the early Jurassic period 201.3 million years ago that went extinct 199.3 million years ago in the Hettangian Age.

Its maximum weight was around 4.3 t with an adult femur length of 845 mm.[1] Jingshanosaurus xinwaensis grew to be 5 meters (16.4 ft) long.[2]

History of discovery

Its fossils, a nearly complete skeleton including the skull, were found near the town of Jingshan ("Golden Hill"), Lufeng County, Yunnan Province, China, from which the name derives.[3] First described in 1995, the type species is J. xinwaensis, formalized by Zhang and Yang.[4] Fossil remains of Jingshanosaurus had been exhibited in museums several years prior to the formal naming. A complete skeleton and skull of Jingshanosaurus xinwaensis have been found and is considered the last prosauropods to live on earth.[5]

Classification

Jingshanosaurus may have been most closely related to Yunnanosaurus, and has, at times, been included in the Yunnanosauridae. In fact, Dong Zhiming considered Jingshanosaurus possibly a large specimen of Yunnanosaurus. If true, this would make Jingshanosaurus a junior synonym of Yunnanosaurus.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jingshanosaurus xinwaensis Zhang & Yang 1994 data - Encyclopedia of Life. 2021-12-14. eol.org.
  2. Web site: Jingshanosaurus Natural History Museum. 2021-12-14. www.nhm.ac.uk. en.
  3. https://web.archive.org/web/20101225025430/http://dinosauria.com/dml/names/dinoj.htm Ben Creisler, Dinosauria Translation and Pronunciation Guide.
  4. Y. Zhang, and Z. Yang. (1995). A new complete osteology of Prosauropoda in Lufeng Basin, Yunnan, China. Yunnan Publishing House of Science and Technology, Kunming, China 1-100. [Chinese]
  5. Web site: Jingshanosaurus Natural History Museum. 2021-12-14. www.nhm.ac.uk. en.