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Eepers
Dinovember 2024 Day 26: Discoveries Down Under
Diamantinasaurus and Kunbarrasaurus
Most interesting extinct australian animal starting with 'K'
Kadimakara
Kalisuchus
Kambara
Kimberella
Kolopsis
Koolasuchus
Kronosaurus
Kunbarrasaurus
Links in lieu of propoganda. Kadimakara, a triassic archosauromorph reptile
Kalisuchus, a triassic archosauromorph reptile
Kambara, a cenozoic crocodile
Kimberella, a precambrian bilaterally symmetrical animal
Kolopsis, a cenozoic diprotodontid marsupial
Koolasuchus, a cretaceous temnospondyl amphibian
Kronosaurus, a cretaceous marine reptile
Kunbarrasaurus, a cretaceous armoured dinosaur
Day 23: Kunbarrasaurus ieversi
#Archovember Day 23 - Kunbarrasaurus ieversi
In the Early Cretaceous of Australia lived the small, basal ankylosaurian Kunbarrasaurus ieversi. Originally thought to be a species of Minmi, Kunbarrasaurus was eventually discovered to be a new genus of ankylosaur and renamed in 2015. One specimen is the most complete dinosaur fossil ever found in Australia, even containing gut contents! This Kunbarrasaurus’ last meal consisted of plant tissue fragments, whole fruits, and whole seeds. The tissue fragments are small and seem to have been nibbled or chopped by the ankylosaur. Unlike some other dinosaurs, it lacked any gastroliths, leading paleontologists to believe it had a more sophisticated method of grinding up its food.
Kunbarrasaurus fossils have been found in marine sediment, so they were likely swept out to the shallow inland sea that covered Queensland during the Early Cretaceous. However, some other unfortunate dinosaurs have also been found in the same Allaru Formation. These include the titanosaur Austrosaurus and the iguanodontian Muttaburrasaurus.
Day 27: Ankylosauria; Kunbarrasaurus ieversi.
This is the only basal Ankylosaur that originate from the early Cretaceous of Australia.
Kunbarrasaurus ieversi
By Ashley Patch on @apatchsketches!
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Name: Kunbarrasaurus ieversi
Name Meaning: Shield Reptile
First Described: 2015
Described By: Leahey et al.
Classification: Dinosauria, Ornithischia, Genasauria, Thyreophora, Eurypoda, Ankylosauria
Kunbarrasaurus is a basal Ankylosaur from Allaru Mudstone of Australia, living in the late Albian to early Cenomanian ages of the Early to Late Cretaceous, about 199 to 113 million years ago. It is known from multiple specimens, including one in which gut contents were preserved. These contents show evidence of eating vascular plants, fruit, seeds, and fern parts, which were nibbled into small bits, though the fruits and seeds were swallowed whole. It had small osteoderms on the body in parallel rows, larger scutes on its snout, and keels on the neck, as well as spikes on the hips and ridged and keeled scutes and triangular plates on the tail. Like other Ankylosaurs, it was quadrupedal.
Source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kunbarrasaurus
Shout out goes to @alecmiller23-blog-blog!