Aletopelta
| Aletopelta Fossil range: Late Cretaceous |
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Extinct (fossil)
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| Aletopelta coombsi Kirkland & Ford, 2001 |
Aletopelta coombsi (IPA: /əˌliːtəˌpɛltəˈkoʊmzi/) was an ankylosaurian ornithischian dinosaur whose fossils were found in Southern California. Etimologically, the generic name is composed of the Greek terms aletes and pelte, meaning, respectively "wandering" and "shield". This genus name was suggested by Ben Creisler due to the fact that the fossil location, at the time the dinosaur died, being located on the tectonic plate containing the Peninsular Ranges Terrane, was somewhere opposite the middle of Mexico. This plate had thus been wandering northward, carrying the specimen with it. The specific epithet honors the vertebrate paleontologist Walter P. Coombs, Jr., for his ground-breaking work on ankylosaurs and his years of research, which have inspired many an enthusiast as well as professional paleontologist.
Aletopelta is a medium-sized ankylosaurid, estimated to be around 6 m (20 ft)
long, and known from a partial skeleton (Holotype: SDNHM 33909 (San Diego Natural History Museum, San
Diego, California). The skeleton including femora, tibiae,
fibulae and incomplete parts of a
External links
- Aletopelta at DinoData
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