Theropod dinosaur diversity and palaeobiology in the Wealden Group (Early Cretaceous) of England: evidence from a previously undescribed tibia

  • Darren Naish Palaeobiology Research Group, School of Earth, Environmental and Physical Sciences, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth POI 3QL, United Kingdom
Keywords: Early Cretaceous, southern England, Theropoda, Wealden

Abstract

A robust, partial right tibia of a theropod dinosaur (Natural History Museum London collections, BMNH R9385) is described for the first time. The specimen was collected at Hastings, Sussex (England) in the last century, and is among the oldest known of English Wealden Group theropods. It represents a tetanuran theropod that may have been about 3 m in total length, and is distinct from all currently known Wealden theropods for which tibiae have been described. The present specimen is significant palaeobiologically in exhibiting a series of theropod tooth marks on its caudal surface, indicating predation or scavenging by another theropod.

Published
1999-01-01
How to Cite
Darren Naish. (1999). Theropod dinosaur diversity and palaeobiology in the Wealden Group (Early Cretaceous) of England: evidence from a previously undescribed tibia. Netherlands Journal of Geosciences, 367-373. Retrieved from https://njgjournal.nl/index.php/njg/article/view/12308
Section
Regular paper