Ceratopsian Month #31 – Triceratops horridus

Of course we’re ending this month with the most famous of the ceratopsians, the dinosaur superstar Triceratops (“three-horned face”).

Dating to the very end of the Cretaceous, between 68 and 66 million years ago, it was the most common ceratopsid in North America at the time, ranging from Alberta, Canada down to Colorado, USA. Two different species are currently recognized within the genus – T. horridus in the older part of that time range, and T. prorsus in the younger rock layers.

It was one of the very largest ceratopsians, with the biggest individuals reaching sizes of about 7.9-9m (26’-29’6”). Many fossil remains have been found, representing growth stages from juveniles to adults (with Torosaurus speculated to represent the most fully mature individuals), and a lot of variation in exact horn and frill shape is seen between different skulls. One specimen nicknamed “Yoshi’s trike” had some of the longest brow horns of any ceratopsid, with the bony cores alone measuring 1.15m long (3′9″).

Unusually for a chasmosaur, it had a very short and solid frill with no weight-reducing holes, suggesting the structure served a much more defensive role than in other ceratopsids. Damage to the frill bones in some specimens appears to have been caused by other Triceratops, giving support to the popular depiction of these dinosaurs locking horns in fights.

Tooth-marks from the equally-famous Tyrannosaurus have also been found on Triceratops bones. Not all of these predator-prey encounters were fatal, however, with some specimens showing evidence of healing around the damaged areas.

Fossilized skin impressions show that Triceratops was scaly – but with scales unlike those of any other known dinosaur, showing large polygonal scales interspersed with even bigger knobbly scales with odd “nipple-shaped” conical projections in their centers. It’s possible that the “nipples” may have supported larger structures (as I’ve illustrated above), but unfortunately no official scientific description of this skin has been published yet and details about it are vague.


And with this final entry, here’s the chasmosaur evolutionary tree:

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Ceratopsian Month #30 – Torosaurus latus

Torosaurus (“perforated lizard”) was a particularly widespread member of the Triceratopsini, found across western North America. Fossils are known from Canada all the way down to New Mexico and Texas in the southern regions of the USA, although the southernmost specimens represent a second species within the genus, T. utahensis.

Living about 68-66 million years ago, it was one of the largest ceratopsids, reaching body lengths of around 7.5m (24’7″). The size and shape of its three horns varied between individuals, from short and straight to much longer and curving forwards.

It had one of the longest skulls of any known land animal, with some specimens’ heads measuring at least 2.5m long (8′2″). Around half of that length consisted solely of its frill, the shape of which was also quite variable – some were very flat while others curved upwards, and the top edge could be either rounded, straight, or have a “heart-shaped” notch.

In 2010 a study was published by John Scannella and Jack Horner, hypothesizing that Torosaurus wasn’t a unique genus and was actually the fully mature form of Triceratops. While poor media reporting briefly sent the internet into a panic about Triceratops “never existing”, further studies by other paleontologists have failed to come up with the same results, and the debate doesn’t seem to have come to any overall consensus yet.

Ceratopsian Month #29 – Regaliceratops peterhewsi

The Triceratopsini branch of the chasmosaurs first split off somewhere around 75 million years ago, with Titanoceratops being the earliest known member. But they don’t seem to have really diversified until several million years later, towards the very end of the Cretaceous 70-68 million years ago, around the time the centrosaurs had already mostly disappeared.

Regaliceratops (“royal horned face”) dates to about 68-67 million years ago, and is estimated to have measured around 5m long (16’4″). Known from a single near-complete skull discovered in Alberta, Canada, the fossil specimen was nicknamed “Hellboy” for both its stubby brow horns and the immense difficulty of removing it from the surrounding rock.

It had highly unusual ornamentation for a chasmosaur – a long nose horn, short brow horns, and large crown-like spikes ringing its relatively short frill – convergently resembling the sort of arrangement seen in many centrosaurs.