Talk:Labocania: Difference between revisions
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== It's definitely an abelisaur == |
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There are saurolophine hadrosaurs and panoplosaurini nodosaurs in South America, so that means Abelisaurs would definitely ventured into North America. [[User:CuddleKing1993|CuddleKing1993]] ([[User talk:CuddleKing1993|talk]]) 23:40, 16 November 2022 (UTC) |
Revision as of 23:40, 16 November 2022
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Why Isn't it a Tyrannosaurid?
Why isn't Labocania in the family Tyrannosauridae? It's got the same body structure and it lived at the time of most other Tyrannosaurids. Benosaurus 16:55, 22 January 2007 (UTC)
- Basically, because it's more primitive. Tyrannosauridae is defined as the most restrictive group containing Tyannosaurus, Albertasaurus, and Gorgosaurus. Anything more primitive than the common ancestor of those three is excluded, and goes into the broader superfamily Tyrannosauroidea. Dinoguy2 22:01, 22 January 2007 (UTC)
Although it has a few tyrannosaurid-like characters, the referral of Labocania to the Tyrannosauroidea is questionable. It might be a tyrannosauroid, but better material is required to confirm this (Kakuru, 13 February, 2008).
HUGE! HUGE! HUGE!
that image is titanic! it eats up most of my Computers screen! (my resolution is 1600 X 900)--65.96.242.22 (talk) 01:56, 19 January 2013 (UTC)
- The image size specified in the infobox was missing 'px' - maybe it interprets that as cm? - anyway fixed now. Mikenorton (talk) 07:16, 19 January 2013 (UTC)
Labocania the Carcharodontosaurid???
With the afore mentioned close relationship of *Shaochilong* and *Labocania* and Mortimer and Cau publishing speculations on *labocania* being a Carcharodontosaurid I think its worth a quick mention in the article as a possibility.
References
It's definitely an abelisaur
There are saurolophine hadrosaurs and panoplosaurini nodosaurs in South America, so that means Abelisaurs would definitely ventured into North America. CuddleKing1993 (talk) 23:40, 16 November 2022 (UTC)