Magnapaulia is a genus of herbivorous lambeosaurine hadrosaurid dinosaurs known from the Latest Cretaceous Baja California, of northwestern Mexico. It contains a single species, Magnapaulia laticaudus.[2]Magnapaulia was first described in 1981 as a possible species of Lambeosaurus by William J. Morris,[3] and was given its own genus in 2012 by Prieto-Márquez and colleagues.[2]
^David E. Fastovsky [de], Marisol Montellano-Ballesteros, Henry C. Fricke, Jahandar Ramezani, Kaori Tsukui, Gregory P. Wilson, Paul Hall, Rene Hernandez-Rivera & Geraldo Alvarez (2020). Paleoenvironments, taphonomy, and stable isotopic content of the terrestrial, fossil-vertebrate-bearing sequence of the El Disecado Member, El Gallo Formation, Upper Cretaceous, Baja California, México. Geosphere. doi: https://doi.org/10.1130/GES02207.1
^ abPrieto-Márquez, A.; Chiappe, L. M.; Joshi, S. H. (2012). Dodson, Peter (ed.). "The lambeosaurine dinosaur Magnapaulia laticaudus from the Late Cretaceous of Baja California, Northwestern Mexico". PLOS ONE. 7 (6): e38207. Bibcode:2012PLoSO...738207P. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0038207. PMC 3373519. PMID 22719869.
^Morris, William J. (1981). "A new species of hadrosaurian dinosaur from the Upper Cretaceous of Baja California: ?Lambeosaurus laticaudus". Journal of Paleontology. 55 (2): 453–462.
Magnapaulia is a genus of herbivorous lambeosaurine hadrosaurid dinosaurs known from the Latest Cretaceous Baja California, of northwestern Mexico. It...
enough to heal. This species was later (2012) assigned to the new genus Magnapaulia. Lambeosaurus, best known through L. lambei, was quite similar to Corythosaurus...
sauropods at up to 23 t (25 short tons), and 16.6 m (54 ft) in length. Magnapaulia reached 12.5 m (41 ft) in length, or, according to original description...
late Cretaceous dinosaur found in the Shandong Peninsula of China, and Magnapaulia from the late Cretaceous of North America. Both species are known from...
Hai and colleagues. Unlike other modern analyses, they found the genus Magnapaulia to be within Hypacrosaurus, indicating it could be a potential third...