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Dryptosaurus: Revision history


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  • curprev 18:1818:18, 18 January 2025 Bubblesorg talk contribs 26,377 bytes +374 No I did not. The paper talks about the Tar Heel formation as being another place that Dryptosaurus is found. Yes the holotype was found in the New Egypt Formation. I am not denying the New Egypt is Maastrichtian. The paper also notes Dryptosaurus being found in the Tar Heel which is dated to the Middle Campanian at most. undo Tag: Manual revert

16 January 2025

  • curprev 13:4013:40, 16 January 2025 140.254.77.156 talk 26,003 bytes −374 clearly misread the paper: Brownstein clearly states that New Egypt Formation (where Dryptosaurus holotype is from) is late Maastrichtian "The New Egypt Formation preserves the most complete late Maastrichtian dinosaur fauna from the eastern United States. The dinosaur remains retrieved from this formation include the holotype of the large tyrannosauroid dinosaur Dryptosaurus aquilunguis" undo Tags: Reverted references removed

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  • curprev 15:2115:21, 20 November 2024 Theropodillus talk contribs m 25,840 bytes −6 Dryptosaurus here is claimed to be basal. However, this is not the case. 'The anatomy of Dryptosaurus aquilunguis (Dinosauria, Theropoda) and a review of its tyrannosauroid affinities. (American Museum novitates, no. 3717)' by Brusatte et al states that Dryptosaurus is an "intermediate" form between basal Tyrannosauroids and derived Tyrannosaurids, and therefore Dryptosaurus itself is not basal. Therefore I have removed the word basal from the first sentence. undo

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