On the earliest record of Cretaceous tyrannosauroids in western North America: Implications for an Early Cretaceous Laurasian interchange event

Lindsay E. Zanno, Peter J. Makovicky

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

39 Scopus citations

Abstract

The sudden appearance of Asian dinosaur clades within Lower Cretaceous strata of western North America has long been recognised as a biotic dispersion event related to initial establishment of a Beringian land bridge. To date, uncertainty exists regarding the timing of the Early Cretaceous Laurasian interchange event (EKLInE) and the pattern of associated biotic dispersal. Here, we report a tyrannosauroid premaxillary tooth (FMNH PR 2750) from the Cloverly Formation, Wyoming, USA, that pushes back the earliest Cretaceous record of the clade in North America. Although fragmentary, the tooth is consistent with mounting evidence for a pre-108 Ma initiation of EKLInE and earliest Albian emplacement of Beringia. Previous authors have considered the Aptian/Albian of western North America a depauperate dinosaur fauna, characterised by regional extinction and diversity decline. Documentation of Albian tyrannosauroids in the region indicates a more dynamic ecosystem than previously appreciated and marks an early start to faunal mixing between immigrant and endemic dinosaur clades. Finally, we find that the enamel microstructure of FMNH PR 2750 conforms to the morphotype of tyrannosaurids, yet exhibits poor columnar differentiation. This morphology bolsters prior interpretations on the phylogenetic utility of enamel microstructure and suggests a trend of increasing enamel complexity within Tyrannosauroidea.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)317-325
Number of pages9
JournalHistorical Biology
Volume23
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2011
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
We thank A. Shinya and L. Herzog for specimen preparation, B. Strack for SEM assistance, X. Xing, M. Norell, P. Currie, M. Henderson, S. Hutt and others for comparative material access. T. Carr and several anonymous reviewers provided constructive critiques. Fieldwork was supported by the Ferro and Meeker families and was conducted under BLM permit 02-WY-70. LEZ is supported by the John Caldwell-Meeker Fellowship; this research was supported by National Science Foundation EAR 0228607 to PJM.

Keywords

  • Beringia
  • Cloverly Formation
  • dinosaur
  • enamel microstructure
  • paleobiogeography

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