PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Homalocephale
  • Homalocephale
rdfs:comment
  • Escribe la primera sección de tu artículo aquí.
  • Homalocephale (from Greek ωμαλος, homalos, "even", and κεφαλή, kephalē, "head") is a genus of dinosaur belonging to the pachycephalosaurid family, which lived during the late Cretaceous period. The genus was described in 1974 by Osmólska & Maryañska, and consists of a single species, the 3 meters (10 ft) long herbivore Homalocephale calathocercos. Homalocephale lived in what is now Mongolia, 80 million years ago.
  • The species is also noted for having an unusually broad pelvis, which lead some paleontologists to suggest that the wide hips were for giving birth to live young. Others have suggested that the width served to protect vital organs from harm during flank-butting. Homalocephale also had rather long legs, indicating a fast-moving gait.
owl:sameAs
Length
  • 3.0
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:dino/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:fossil/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:jurassic-park/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:jurassicpark/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Range
Kingdom
  • Animalia
Game
  • Jurassic Park III: Park Builder
  • Jurassic Park: Explorer
  • Jurassic Park: Operation Genesis
Name
  • Homalocephale
Caption
  • Restoration of a pair of Homalocephale.
fossil range
  • Late Cretaceous,
Weight
  • 85.0
Meaning
  • Even Head
Image caption
  • Jurassic Park Institute Artwork
Height
  • 0.6
Species
  • *H. calathocercos
Genus
  • (Maryanska & Osmolska, 1974)
  • Homalocephale
Class
Suborder
Family
Order
Diet
  • Herbivore
Superorder
Phylum
Location
  • Mongolia
Infraorder
abstract
  • Escribe la primera sección de tu artículo aquí.
  • Homalocephale (from Greek ωμαλος, homalos, "even", and κεφαλή, kephalē, "head") is a genus of dinosaur belonging to the pachycephalosaurid family, which lived during the late Cretaceous period. The genus was described in 1974 by Osmólska & Maryañska, and consists of a single species, the 3 meters (10 ft) long herbivore Homalocephale calathocercos. Sporting a flat, wedge-shaped skull roof, H. calathocercos was different from other pachycephalosaurs. Nonetheless, the surface of the skull was greatly thickened, and it had been proposed that males competed in head-butting contests, similar to those of modern iguanas. The species is also noted for having an unusually broad pelvis, which lead some paleontologists to suggest that the wide hips were for giving birth to live young. Others have suggested that the width served to protect vital organs from harm during flank-butting. Homalocephale also had rather long legs, indicating a fast-moving gait. The type species, H. calathocercos, was described from an incomplete skull and postcranial material. The specimen has large openings on the top of the skull, a distinct frontoparietal suture, low and long infratemporal fenestrae, and a large, round eye socket. The forehead is notably rough, with multiple nodules on the lateral and posterior sides of the squamosal bone. Palaeontologists concluded that the specimen was an adult, despite the fact that the sutures are discernible and that it had a flat skull (a juvenille trait in many pachycephalosaurid species). Homalocephale lived in what is now Mongolia, 80 million years ago.
  • The species is also noted for having an unusually broad pelvis, which lead some paleontologists to suggest that the wide hips were for giving birth to live young. Others have suggested that the width served to protect vital organs from harm during flank-butting. Homalocephale also had rather long legs, indicating a fast-moving gait. The type species, H. calathocercos, was described from an incomplete skull and postcranial material. The specimen has large openings on the top of the skull, a distinct frontoparietal suture, low and long infratemporal fenestrae, and a large, round eye socket. The forehead is notably rough, with multiple nodules on the lateral and posterior sides of the squamosal bone. Palaeontologists concluded that the specimen was an adult, despite the fact that the sutures are discernible and that it had a flat skull (a juvenile trait in many pachycephalosaurid species). In 2010, a study by Nick Longrich and colleagues suggested that flat-headed pachycephalosaurs were just juvenile forms of dome-headed adults, a view also supported by the earlier analysis of Horner and Goodwin in 2009. Longrich and colleagues suggested that Homalocephale is actually the juvenile or sub-adult stage of Prenocephale.