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Utah
in the Age of Dinosaurs
Dinosaurs lived only during the Mesozoic Era, which is often
called the "Age of Dinosaurs". Utah has perhaps the best Mesozoic
rock record in the world.
The Mesozoic Era (225 to 65 million years ago) is divided into
three time periods: the Triassic (225-193 million years ago);
the Jurassic (193-136 million years ago); and the Cretaceous (136-65
million years ago).
Triassic Period
The first dinosaurs lived near the end of theTriassic. Eoraptor,
a bipedal carnivore recently discovered in South America, is the
earliest known dinosaur.
Triassic dinosaurs have not yet been found in Utah. Late Triassic
rocks known as the Chinle Formation are exposed throughout southern
and eastern Utah. This rock unit has yielded abundant remains
of the carnivorous (meat eating) dinosaur Coelophysis in
Arizona and New Mexico. However fossil skeletons of other animals
are known from Utah and it is only a matter of time before Utah's
first Triassic dinosaur is discovered.
Jurassic Period
During the Early and Middle Jurassic Utah was mostly desert, although
periodically sea level would rise and the sea would invade this sand
dune covered landscape. The great sandstone cliffs of Zion and Arches
National Monument are basically fossil sand dunes. Although, dinosaur
foot prints are known from many sites in Utah, no dinosaur skeletons
have yet been found in these desert rocks. Marine reptiles have been
found in the marine rocks near Dinosaur National Monument.
Most of Utah's well-known dinosaur fossils are Late Jurassic
dinosaurs. They are found mainly in a rock unit known as the Morrison
Formation which dates to approximately 150 million years ago.
Dinosaurs are divided into two major groups, the saurischian,
or "lizard-hipped", dinosaurs and the ornithichian, or "bird-hipped",
dinosaurs.
The saurischian dinosaurs include the herbivorous (plant eaters),
quadrupedal sauropods and the carnivorous, bipedal theropods.
The ornithichian dinosaurs are all herbivorous and are comprised
of many groups, including stegosaurs, ornithopods, and ceratopsians.
Birds evolved from a group of thesaurischian theropods known
as coelurosaurs.
Dinosaur fossils from the Morrison Formation can be found in
Utah at the Dinosaur National Monument quarry in northeastern
Utah and at the Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry in east-central
Utah.
Allosaurus is Utah's State Fossil. Allosaurus
is a carnivorous theropod found in abundance at the Cleveland-Lloyd
Dinosaur Quarry.
Cretaceous Period
Early Cretaceous dinosaur fossils are found in Utah in the Cedar
Mountain Formation, which dates to about 125-98 million years ago.
This rock unit overlies the Morrison Formation, but represents more
time and contains several entirely different faunas or groups of
dinosaurs. These represent at time when North America was connected
to Europe before flowering plants, a period when rising sea levels
led to the isolation of North America from the rest of the world,
and finally a time when the first land connections with Asia were
established and flowering plants had come into their own. The Cedar
Mountain Formation is the basis of considerable research by UGS
paleontologists.
Late Cretaceous dinosaurs such as Tyrannosaurus and Torosaurus
lived about 65 million years ago at the end of the age of dinosaurs.
Cretaceous dinosaur sites are found in great abundance in Montana
and Alberta, Canada, and are also found in the North Horn Formation
of central Utah. Further south in the Grand Staircase - Escalante
National Monument the most continuous record of Cretaceous dinosaurs
in the world has now been recognized and research is just beginning
to bring these many undescribed Utah dinosaurs to light.
For more information on Utah dinosaurs:
Jurassic Dinosaurs || Early
Cretaceous Dinosaurs || Late Cretaceous
Dinosaurs
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