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-SlvrHwk 21:10, 1 December 2024 (UTC) Update: after some additional reading I'm a little more confident in this orientation of the scapular spine. It's more or less a flattened 'splate', and the description notes an apparent 'platform-like' surface where it would attach to the torso (and this is how the CV mount reconstructs it).
The earliest potential record of dinosaurs in North America comes from rare, unidentified (possibly theropod) footprints in the Middle-Late Triassic Pekin Formation of North Carolina. [1] However, the most reliable early record of North American dinosaurs comes from fragmentary saurischian fossils unearthed from the Upper Triassic Dockum Group ...
It corresponds to an animal with an estimated snout to vent length of 80 mm (3.1 in) and a mass of 13–43 g (0.46–1.52 oz). The unguals of the foot are less curved than in Eomaia or Sinodelphys , indicating that the mammal could climb but less effectively than in the two latter genera and so was likely not arboreal but potentially scansorial.
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Deinocheirus (/ ˌ d aɪ n oʊ ˈ k aɪ r ə s / DY-no-KY-rəs) is a genus of large ornithomimosaur that lived during the Late Cretaceous around 70 million years ago. In 1965, a pair of large arms, shoulder girdles, and a few other bones of a new dinosaur were first discovered in the Nemegt Formation of Mongolia.