Famille
Ichnogenre Taxon formel Éteint

Anomoepodidae

Lull 1904

Les Anomoepodidae sont une famille fossile d'ichnotaxons de dinosaures ornithopodes basale dans ce sous-ordre.

Plage temporelle
Trias
Jurassique
Crétacé
Paléogène
Néogène
252 201 145 66 0 Ma
Occurrences PBDB
12
Groupe
Dinosaures
Herbivore Vivant au sol, grégaire Terrestre
Classification
Dinosauria Clade non classé
Ornithischia Clade non classé
Neornithischia Clade non classé
Pyrodontia Clade non classé
Cerapoda Clade non classé
Ornithopoda Sous-ordre
Anomoepodidae Famille
Sites de découverte 12 sites géolocalisés
Répartition
Principaux pays
🇺🇸 États-Unis
5
🇨🇳 Chine
3
🇨🇦 Canada
2
🇵🇱 Pologne
1
🇹🇭 Thaïlande
1
Formations géologiques
Rock Point
1
Yongping
1
Chinle
1
Moenave
1
Zagaje
1
Fuxian
1
Lufeng
1
Kayenta/Navajo Sandstone
1
Mist Mountain
1
Distribution temporelle
Hauterivien (132.6–125.77 Ma)
1
Valanginien (137.05–132.6 Ma)
1
Tithonien (149.2–143.1 Ma)
1
Toarcien (184.2–174.7 Ma)
1
Pliensbachien (192.9–184.2 Ma)
2
Sinémurien (199.5–192.9 Ma)
1
Hettangien (201.4–199.5 Ma)
1
Rhétien (205.7–201.4 Ma)
1
Norien (227.3–205.7 Ma)
3
Bibliographie
Description originale
R. S. Lull. 1904. Fossil footprints of the Jura-Trias of North America. Memoirs of the Boston Society of Natural History 5(11):461-557
Bibliographie (9)
M. Oukassou, O. Zafaty, and G. D. Gierliński, H. Klein, H. Saber, M. Amzil, A. Charrière. 2023. First record of a small stegosaur footprint (cf. Stegopodus) from the ?Upper Jurassic-?Lower Cretaceous red beds of the Middle Atlas, Morocco. Ichnos 29(3-4):195–204 DOI ↗
M. G. Lockley, J. R. Foster, and G. D. Gierlinski, K. Shibata. 2018. Upper Triassic tetrapod track assemblages from the Chinle Group, Moab area, Utah. Fossil Record 6. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 79:417-427
L. Xing, M. G. Lockley, and J. Zhang, H. You, H. Klein, W. S. Persons, H. Dai, Z. Dong. 2016. First Early Jurassic ornithischian and theropod footprint assemblage and a new ichnotaxon Shenmuichnus wangi ichnosp. nov. from Yunnan Province, southwestern China. Historical Biology 28(6):721-733 DOI ↗
R. T. McCrea, L. G. Buckley, and A. G. Plint, P. J. Currie, J. W. Haggart, C. W. Helm, S. G. Pemberton. 2014. A review of vertebrate track-bearing formations from the Mesozoic and earliest Cenozoic of western Canada with a description of a new theropod ichnospecies and reassignment of an avian ichnogenus. Fossil Footprints of Western North America. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 62:5-94
J. Li, M. G. Lockley, and Y. Zhang, S. Hu, M. Matsukawa, Z. Bai. 2012. An important ornithischian tracksite in the Early Jurassic of the Shenmu region, Shaanxi, China. Acta Geologica Sinica 86(1):1-10
M. G. Lockley, R. T. McCrea, and M. Matsukawa. 2009. Ichnological evidence for small quadrupedal ornithischians from the basal Cretaceous of SE Asia and North America: implications for a global radiation. Late Palaeozoic and Mesozoic Ecosystems in SE Asia. The Geological Society of London, Special Publication 315:255-269 DOI ↗
M. G. Lockley. 2006. Observations on the ichnogenus Gwyneddichium and Gwyneddichium-like footprints and trackways from the Upper Triassic of the western United States. The Triassic-Jurassic Terrestrial Transition. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 37:170-175
M. G. Lockley and G. D. Gierlinski. 2006. Diverse vertebrate ichnofaunas containing Anomoepus and other unusual trace fossils from the Lower Jurassic of the western United States: implications for paleoecology and palichnostratigraphy. The Triassic-Jurassic Terrestrial Transition. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin 37:176-191
M. G. Lockley, A. P. Hunt, and R. Gaston, J. I. Kirkland. 1996. A trackway bonanza with mammal footprints from the Late Triassic of Colorado. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 16(3, suppl.):49A