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Jurassic
Dinosaurs of Utah
The Morrison Formation
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Allosaurus, Utah's State
Fossil, was the dominant predator of North America during
the Late Jurassic. It is known from numerous skeletons, ranging
from 10 to 40 feet in length, from the Cleveland-Lloyd Dinosaur
Quarry in east-central Utah. Mounted skeletons, cast from
Cleveland-Lloyd Allosaurs, are displayed in over three dozen
museums around the world. With sharper teeth and a more graceful
build, Allosaurus rivals Tyrannosaurus rex as
the supreme meat-eater of the Mesozoic. |
| Apatosaurus
is the correct name for the dinosaur better known as Brontosaurus.
Apatosaurus is probably the most commonly known, but
not the most common of the four-footed, long-necked sauropod
dinosaurs. This heavily built quadrupedal giant of the Jurassic
Period weighed more than 30 tons, or as much as six average
elephants. With lengths approaching 90 feet, the Apatosaurus
was a giant in the Age of Dinosaurs. |
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| Barosaurus was a slender,
long-necked, long-tailed sauropod. Because of its graceful
anatomy, some paleontologists have argued that this sauropod
could stand on its hind legs and reach high into the trees
for food, perhaps to heights of 50-60 feet. A skeleton from
Dinosaur National Monument was mounted in the standing position
was recently unveiled at the American Museum of Natural History
in New York. However, recent studies of its skull and neck
suggest that with its close relatives Apatosaurus and
Diplodocus, Barosaurus spent most of its time
grazing low growing plants. |
| Brachiosaurus was the
largest and heaviest dinosaur known from the Morrison Formation
of Utah. This supergiant weighed as much as 80 tons, or the
combined weights of 15 large elephants. Ultrasauros,
a supergiant from the Morrison Formation of Colorado was a
giant specimen of Brachiosaurus, and may have weighed
as much as 100 tons. Brachiosaurus is the giraffe-necked
sauropod, with tall front legs and a long neck designed to
reach far above the ground. Bones of this Late Jurassic giant
have also been found in eastern Africa. |
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Camarasaurus was the
most common dinosaur of the Jurassic Period. Even with their
relatively short neck and tail, this sauropod reached lengths
of 50 feet and weighed as much as 25 tons. The spoon-like
teeth chopped coarse vegetation (primarily conifers, cycads,
and ferns), their principal food. |
| Camptosaurus was a medium-sized,
bipedal herbivore of the Late Jurassic that weighed up to
1,000 pounds and reached lengths up to 23 feet. This ornithopod
was ancestral to many of the highly successful plant-eating
dinosaurs of the Cretaceous, such as the duckbills and Iguanodon.
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Ceratosaurus was a large
but slender predator of the Late Jurassic. With a strange
horn on the top of the head between the eyes, this active
meat-eater may have engaged in head-butting combat. Like Brachiosaurus,
bones of Ceratosaurus have also been found in eastern
Africa. |
| Diplodocus, the "double-beam"
dinosaur named for unusual support structures beneath its
tail, was a long and slender relative of Apatosaurus.
Several nearly complete skeletons have been found at Dinosaur
National Monument. Casts of Diplodocus skeletons, averaging
87 feet in length, were sent to museums around the world by
Andrew Carnegie in the early part of this century, including
the Vernal Field House of Natural History. |
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Dryosaurus is a common,
small ornithopod first found at Dinosaur National Monument. |
| Dystrophaeus is the
rarest, oldest, and first-discovered sauropod dinosaur in
western North America. Its bones were found by the Macomb
Expedition to southern Utah in 1857. Because of its stratigraphic
position at the bottom of the Morrison Formation (Tidwell
Member), this dinosaur may be ancestral to some or all of
the other North American sauropods of the Late Jurassic Morrison
Formation. |
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| Marshosaurus is another
small, rare theropod. It reached lengths up to 16 feet and
was named after O.C. Marsh, a famous paleontologist from the
1800s. |
| Stegosaurus, the plated
dinosaur, was one of the major plant-eaters of the Jurassic
Period. Most paleontologists believe its triangular bony plates
were set in two rows along the backbone in a staggered arrangement.
The function of the plates is controversial. Perhaps they
were for protection, but some paleontologists think that they
may have collected solar radiation for thermal regulation.
Even though it is the state dinosaur of Colorado, it is common
in Utah. |
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| Stokesosaurus was a
rare carnivorous dinosaur reaching lengths of 13 feet, and
was named for a prominent Utah geologist, the late Dr. William
Lee Stokes. Its bones and braincase anatomy indicate that
it may be an ancestor of the gigantic Tyrannosaurus
that lived 85 million years later at the end of the Cretaceous
Period. |
| Torvosaurus is the largest
Jurassic theropod known in Utah. Reaching nearly the size
of Tyrannosaurus, it was able to terrorize even the
giant sauropods. Although rare it is known from a couple of
sites. |
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Don't miss Utah's Early Cretaceous
dinosaurs and Late Cretaceous
dinosaurs.
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