Autores
Max C Langer, Martín D Ezcurra, Oliver WM Rauhut, Michael J Benton, Fabien Knoll, Blair W McPhee, Fernando E Novas, Diego Pol, Stephen L Brusatte
Fecha de publicación
2017/11
Revista
Nature
Volumen
551
Número
7678
Páginas
E1-E3
Editor
Nature Publishing Group
Descripción
For over a century, the standard classification scheme has split dinosaurs into two fundamental groups 1:‘lizard-hipped’saurischians (including meat-eating theropods and long-necked sauropodomorphs) and ‘bird-hipped’ornithischians (including a variety of herbivorous species) 2–4. In a recent paper, Baron et al. 5 challenged this paradigm with a new phylogenetic analysis that places theropods and ornithischians together in a group called Ornithoscelida, to the exclusion of sauropodomorphs, and used their phylogeny to argue that dinosaurs may have originated in northern Pangaea, not in the southern part of the supercontinent, as has more commonly been considered 6, 7. Here we evaluate and reanalyse the morphological dataset underpinning the proposal by Baron et al. 5 and provide quantitative biogeographic analyses, which challenge the key results of their study by recovering a classical monophyletic …
Citas totales
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Artículos de Google Académico
MC Langer, MD Ezcurra, OWM Rauhut, MJ Benton… - Nature, 2017