Clade non classé
Valide Existant

Neotetanurae

Carrano et al., 2002

Tetanurae is a clade that includes most theropod dinosaurs, including megalosauroids, allosauroids, and coelurosaurs. Tetanurans are defined as all theropods more closely related to modern birds than to Ceratosaurus and contain the majority of predatory dinosaur diversity. Tetanurae likely diverged from its sister group, Ceratosauria, during the late Triassic. Tetanurae first appeared in the fossil record by the Early Jurassic about 190 mya and by the Middle Jurassic had become globally distributed.

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Plage temporelle
Occurrences PBDB
0
Groupe
Dinosaures
Carnivore Vivant au sol, solitaire Terrestre
Neotetanurae
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Six exemplar tetanurans (top to bottom): Monolophosaurus in combat with Tuojiangosaurus, Allosaurus, Deinocheirus, Spinosaurus, Sciurumimus, and Dromaius novaehollandae. This is a collection of six different works which have been previously published on Wikimedia Commons (see source field below). © hibino[1] User:FunkMonk User:ケラトプスユウタ Mike Bowler[2] User:Toter Alter Mann User:Rufus46 · CC BY-SA 4.0 · Wikimedia
PBDB Wikipedia
Classification
Dinosauria Clade non classé
Theropoda Clade non classé
Neotheropoda Clade non classé
Averostra Clade non classé
Tetanurae Clade non classé
Neotetanurae Clade non classé
Images 1
Bibliographie
Description originale
M. T. Carrano, S. D. Sampson, and C. A. Forster. 2002. The osteology of <i>Masiakasaurus knopfleri</i>, a small abelisauroid (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from the Late Cretaceous of Madagascar. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 22(3):510-534 DOI ↗