IGNIS July 2014 | Page 16

Cerapoda The Cerapoda were the main herbivores of the Cretaceous. The first Cerapods evolved in the early Jurassic. They didn’t start getting bigger until the late Jurassic. They evolved to lengths of 15m in the late Cretaceous, and lived in herds of hundreds of animals. Cerapoda is divided into three groups: Ornithopoda, Pachycephalosauria, and Ceratopsia. The latter two are sometimes grouped together as Marginocephalia because they share a few features, including a bony shelf on the back of the skull. Avaceratops Ornithopoda Ornithopods started out as small, bipedal running grazers, and grew in size and numbers until they became one of the most successful groups of herbivores in the Cretaceous world, dominating the North American landscape. They include one of the earliest discovered dinosaurs, Iguanodon, as well as the famous crested and “duck-billed” hadrosaurs. Iguanodon Ornithopoda means “bird feet”; this refers to their characteristic three-toed feet, although many early forms retained four toes. They also had no armour, a horny beak and a missing hole in the lower jaw. The early ornithopods were only about a metre long, but probably very fast. They had stiff tails to help them balance as they ran on their back legs. Later ornithopods became more adapted to grazing on all four legs and their spines curved, similar to ground-feeders we see today, such as the bison. As they became more adapted to eating while bent over, they became semiquadrapedal - still running on two legs but spending most of their time walking or grazing while on all four legs. Pachycephalosauria Pachycephalosauria is the infraorder of “thick-headed” Marginocephalia dinosaurs. Most lived during the Late Cretaceous Period, in what is now North America and Asia. They were all bipedal, herbivourous/omnivorous animals with thick skulls. Their skulls were up to 9 inches (23 cm) thick, as in Pachycephalosaurus. By comparison, a human skull is only ¼ inch (.64 cm) thick. In some fossils, the skull roof is domed and several inches thick; in others it is flat or wedge-shaped. The domes were often surrounded by nodes and/or spikes.Their vertebrae also show strengthening that would be of use if pachycephalosaurs used their heads as battering rams, although this is widely debated. Some example of Pachycephalosaurs include Stygimoloch, Stegoceras and Wannanosaurus. 16 | FUSE Ceratopsia Ceratopsia, meaning ‘horned face’, is a group of herbivorous beaked dinosaurs that lived in what is now North America, Europe and Asia during the Cretaceous Period, although ancestral forms lived earlier in the Jurassic Period. Early members of the ceratopsian group were small bipedal animals. Later members became very large quadrapeds and developed elaborate facial horns and frills extending over the neck. The horns may have been used for defence against predators such as Tyrannosaurus, and also for interacting with members of its own species, in ways similar to the behaviour of present-day deer or antelope. Ceratopsians are easily recognized by features of the skull. On the tip of a ceratopsian upper jaw is the rostral bone, a unique bone found nowhere else in the animal kingdom. Along with the predentary bone, which forms the tip of the lower jaw in all ornithischians, the rostral forms a parrot-like beak. Dracorex Rubeosaurus The most famous and largest member of the family was one of its last, the Triceratops, who had three forward-facing horns: one above each eye and one projecting from its nose. 17 | FUSE