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Restoration of the Late Triassic dinosaur relative Dromomeron †Dromomeron †Dromomeron gregorii – type locality for species †Dryptosaurus †Dufrenoyia †Dufrenoyia justinae †Durania †Echinocorys †Ecphora †Ectenosaurus †Edmontonia – or unidentified comparable form †Elea – tentative report
This list of the Paleozoic life of Texas contains the various prehistoric life-forms whose fossilized remains have been reported from within the US state of Texas and are between 538.8 and 252.17 million years of age.
In 1938, a major dinosaur footprint find occurred near Glen Rose. Pleurocoelus was the Texas state dinosaur from 1997 to 2009, when it was replaced by Sauroposeidon (Paluxysaurus jonesi) after the Texan fossils once referred to the former species were reclassified to a new genus.
Drought and intense heat have unearthed dozens of dinosaur tracks normally hidden under murky water and mud at a Texas park, photos show. Paul Baker, retail manager at Dinosaur Valley State Park ...
However, the most reliable early record of North American dinosaurs comes from fragmentary saurischian fossils unearthed from the Upper Triassic Dockum Group of Texas. [2] Later in the Triassic period, dinosaurs left more recognizable remains, and could be identified as specific genera.
Dinosaurs reported from the Paw Paw Formation; Genus Species Presence Material Notes Images Nodosauridae indet. [1] [2] Indeterminate Tarrant County, Texas: Humerus, ilia, scapulocoracoid and specimen representing a baby Juvenile nodosaurid remains that cannot be compared with Pawpawsaurus due to lack of overlapping elements.
The most famous of these sites is the Paluxy River site in Dinosaur Valley State Park near the town of Glen Rose, Texas, southwest of Fort Worth. In 1938, Roland T. Bird , assistant to Barnum Brown of the American Museum of Natural History ("AMNH") in New York, New York, discovered a dozen sauropod and four theropod or carnosaur trackways all ...
Texasetes (meaning "Texas resident") is a genus of ankylosaurian dinosaurs from the late Lower Cretaceous of North America.This poorly known genus has been recovered from the Paw Paw Formation (late Albian) near Haslet, Tarrant County, Texas, which has also produced the nodosaurid ankylosaur Pawpawsaurus.