Crosbysaurus is a genus of extinct archosauromorph that lived in the Late Triassic of Arizona, New Mexico, North Carolina, Texas, and Utah.[1] It is known from the Chinle Formation and Dockum Group rock units from the southwestern United States. The type species is C. harrisae, and the only known material includes teeth. 11 specimens are known, each including a single tooth.
Crosbysaurus was originally identified as an ornithischian dinosaur by Andrew Heckert when it was first described in 2004.[2] Further work has shown that it is likely an archosauromorph based on the features of its teeth, and it may belong to Archosauriformes.[3] The taxon is likely valid as it differs from other genera from the same region known from teeth like Revueltosaurus, Tecovasaurus, Krzyzanowskisaurus, Lucianosaurus, and Protecovasaurus.[1]
^ abGay, R. J.; Aude, I. S. (2015). "The first occurrence of the enigmatic archosauriform CrosbysaurusHeckert 2004 from the Chinle Formation of southern Utah". PeerJ. 3: e905. doi:10.7717/peerj.905. PMC 4411520. PMID 25922793.
^Heckert, Andrew B. (2004). Late Triassic microvertebrates from the lower Chinle Group (Otischalkian-Adamanian: Carnian), southwestern U.S.A (27 ed.). Albuquerque: New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin.
^Irmis, R. B.; Parker, W. G.; Nesbitt, S. J.; Liu, J. (2007). "Early ornithischian dinosaurs: The Triassic record". Historical Biology. 19 (1): 3–22. Bibcode:2007HBio...19....3I. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.539.8311. doi:10.1080/08912960600719988. S2CID 11006994.
presumed that Crosbysaurus was a herbivore. Gay, R. J.; Aude, I. S. (2015). "The first occurrence of the enigmatic archosauriform Crosbysaurus Heckert 2004...
Galtonia, Pekinosaurus, Tecovasaurus, Lucianosaurus, Protecovasaurus, Crosbysaurus, and Azendohsaurus were all at one time considered to be Triassic ornithischians...
Allosaurus Crichtonpelta Crichtonsaurus Cristatusaurus Crittendenceratops Crosbysaurus – subsequently found to be a non-dinosaurian archosauriform Cruxicheiros...