Investigating the diversity and palaeobiogeography of ankylosaurian dinosaurs using tooth morphometrics

dc.contributor.authorCross, Emily
dc.contributor.supervisorArbour, Victoria
dc.contributor.supervisorFraass, Andrew
dc.date.accessioned2024-08-02T20:24:26Z
dc.date.available2024-08-02T20:24:26Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.degree.departmentSchool of Earth and Ocean Sciences
dc.degree.levelMaster of Science MSc
dc.description.abstractThe presence of a basal cingulum, fluting, and overall size have been used to differentiate nodosaurid and ankylosaurid teeth for decades. However, the taxonomic utility of tooth morphology in ankylosaurs has not yet been quantitatively tested. Additionally, new phylogenetic hypotheses recognize four ankylosaur families (Panoplosauridae, Polacanthidae, Struthiosauridae, and Ankylosauridae), rather than the traditional nodosaurid-ankylosaurid dichotomy. Understanding ankylosaur tooth variation could better help identify taxa with ambiguous phylogenetic affinities or allow isolated teeth to test palaeoecological questions like the potential extirpation of mid Cretaceous ankylosaurids from Laramidia. I analyzed a large sample of ankylosaur teeth from the Cretaceous of Laramidia using traditional and 2D outline geometric morphometrics and investigated the utility of size and the presence or absence of a cingulum and fluting for differentiating ankylosaur teeth. Morphometric analyses show that ‘nodosaurids’ had the greatest variation in tooth shape and size. Panoplosauridae accounts for a large amount of ‘nodosaurid’ variation, whereas basal ankylosaurs, Polacanthidae, and Ankylosauridae share a similar restricted morphospace. Previously, small teeth were identified as ankylosaurid and large teeth as nodosaurid; teeth with a crown base length or height over 10 mm are only found in panoplosaurids and Peloroplites, traditionally considered a nodosaurid but recently recovered as a polacanthid, but smaller sizes are found in all clades. A basal cingulum and fluting are associated with Ankylosauridae and Panoplosauridae, but not with other ankylosaur families. Linear discriminant analyses could only accurately identify between 50-75% of the teeth in our sample. LDAs should therefore be used in conjunction with size and discrete traits to identify isolated teeth as panoplosaurids. As such, caution should be used when attempting to use isolated ankylosaur teeth in broader palaeoecological questions.
dc.description.embargo2025-07-26
dc.description.scholarlevelGraduate
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1828/16924
dc.languageEnglisheng
dc.language.isoen
dc.rightsAvailable to the World Wide Web
dc.titleInvestigating the diversity and palaeobiogeography of ankylosaurian dinosaurs using tooth morphometrics
dc.typeThesis

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