Safekipedia

Ceratopsia

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A reconstruction of a Psittacosaurus family from the prehistoric age, showing these small herbivorous dinosaurs in a natural setting.

Ceratopsia

Ceratopsia, also called Ceratopia, were a group of herbivorous, beaked dinosaurs. They lived during the Cretaceous Period, mostly in what are now North America, Asia, and Europe. Their name means "horned faces" in Greek. This is because many had bony frills and horns on their skulls. These dinosaurs first appeared even earlier, in the Late Jurassic of Asia. The earliest known ceratopsian was Yinlong downsi. It lived between 161.2 and 155.7 million years ago.

One of the most famous ceratopsians is Triceratops. It was a large dinosaur known for its three horns and strong bony frill. Many ceratopsian genus names end in "-ceratops," like Ceratops. This dinosaur gave the whole group its name. However, scientists think Ceratops might not be a true genus. This is because its fossils do not show unique features that make it different from other ceratopsians. The last ceratopsian species, Triceratops prorsus, went extinct around 66 million years ago. This happened during the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event.

Description

Centrosaurus, with large nasal horn and bony processes over the front of the frill. Museum of Victoria.

Ceratopsians were a group of plant-eating dinosaurs known for their beaks and horns. Early ones like Psittacosaurus were small and walked on two legs. Later ones such as Centrosaurus and Triceratops grew bigger and walked on four legs. These later species had big facial horns and frills on their necks. The frills might have helped protect their necks or been used to show off.

Ceratopsians are famous for their special skull features. They had a bone called the rostral bone on the front of their upper jaw, which helped them chew plants. They also had another bone called the predentary on the lower jaw, forming a beak like a parrot. Their skulls had special bones below the eyes, giving their heads a triangular shape from above. The neck frill, made from bones like the parietal and squamosal, had small bones around it that helped different species look different from each other.

History of study

Agathaumas was the first recognized genus of ceratopsian.

Main article: Timeline of ceratopsian research

Scientists started finding dinosaur bones in the 1800s. They first found teeth and parts of skeletons. It took time to learn what these fossils were. Famous scientists like Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh studied these bones. They named many new dinosaur species. They found important features like horns and frills. This helped them know these were a special group of dinosaurs called ceratopsians.

Classification

Psittacosaurus, an early ceratopsian

Ceratopsia was a group of plant-eating dinosaurs. Scientist Othniel Charles Marsh named them in 1890. These dinosaurs had special features like horns and a bone on their snouts. The name Ceratopsia means "horned faces" in Greek.

Today, scientists say Ceratopsia is the biggest group of dinosaurs that includes species like Ceratops montanus and Triceratops horridus but not Pachycephalosaurus wyomingensis. The first ceratopsians lived in the Early Cretaceous Period in northern China and Mongolia. They already had some of their special features, so scientists think even older ceratopsians might be found someday. Later groups grew bigger frills and more complex horns.

Paleobiology

Ceratopsians are special because scientists often find only their skulls. This helps us learn about many kinds of these dinosaurs, even though full skeletons are rare. We know how Psittacosaurus and Protoceratops grew from babies to adults, which teaches us a lot about these species.

Some pictures show ceratopsians with legs that were not very strong, meaning they might not have moved quickly. But some scientists think the bigger ones could run as fast as modern rhinos. There has also been debate about whether Protoceratops lived only at night or if it was active at different times during the day.

Paleoecology

Ceratopsia were a group of plant-eating dinosaurs that began in Asia. During the middle of the Cretaceous Period, they moved to North America through the Bering Strait. A few ceratopsians even reached Europe by crossing islands.

Some ceratopsians, like Psittacosaurus and Protoceratops, were very common where they lived. Others, such as Triceratops, were the main large plant-eaters in parts of western North America. Some species, like Centrosaurus, lived together in groups, which changed their surroundings and provided meals for predators.

Images

A fossil skeleton of Protoceratops, an ancient dinosaur, displayed at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History.
Scientific illustration showing different types of skin on dinosaur fossils, including patterns and textures of scales from various ceratopsian species.
A skeleton model of the dinosaur Protoceratops on display at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History.
A skeleton of Styracosaurus, a horned dinosaur from the ancient past.
A Triceratops skeleton on display at the Los Angeles Museum of Natural History.
Skulls of horned herbivore dinosaurs on display at the Natural History Museum of Utah.
An artist’s illustration of Psittacosaurus mongoliensis, a plant-eating dinosaur from the time of the dinosaurs.
An artist's illustration of Yinlong downsi, an early horned dinosaur from the Late Jurassic period of China.
An artist's impression of Chaoyangsaurus, an early ceratopsian dinosaur from the Late Jurassic period of China.
A detailed pencil drawing of Psittacosaurus sinensis, an early Cretaceous dinosaur from China.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Ceratopsia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.