Eric K. Lund
Ohio University
9 Papers
103 Citations
Eric K. Lund is an academic researcher from Ohio University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Kaiparowits Formation & Ceratopsidae. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 8 publications. Previous affiliations of Eric K. Lund include Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine & University of Utah.
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Papers
A remarkable short-snouted horned dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous (late Campanian) of southern Laramidia
Scott D. Sampson,Eric K. Lund,Eric K. Lund,Eric K. Lund,Mark A. Loewen,Andrew A. Farke,Katherine E. Clayton +6 more
TL;DR: As the first well-represented southern centrosaurine comparable in age to the bulk of northern forms, Nasutoceratops provides strong support for the provincialism hypothesis, which posits that Laramidia—the western landmass formed by inundation of the central region of North America by the Western Interior Seaway—hosted at least two coeval dinosaur communities for over a million years of late Campanian time.
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A historical and biogeographical examination of hadrosaurian dinosaurs
Eric K. Lund,Terry A. Gates +1 more
- 27 Mar 2006
TL;DR: This paper reviewed the history of hadrosaur discoveries, placing them into geographic context, noting 27 valid taxa from North America, 16 from Asia, two from South America, four from Europe, and one occurrence from Antarctica.
A New Centrosaurine Ceratopsid, Machairoceratops cronusi gen et sp. nov., from the Upper Sand Member of the Wahweap Formation (Middle Campanian), Southern Utah
Eric K. Lund,Eric K. Lund,Patrick M. O'Connor,Patrick M. O'Connor,Mark A. Loewen,Mark A. Loewen,Zubair A. Jinnah +6 more
TL;DR: A new centrosaurine ceratopsid from the upper member of the Wahweap Formation is described based on cranial material representing a single individual recovered from a calcareous mudstone, which aligns Machairoceratops as the definitive sister taxon to a clade formed by Diabloceratops and Albertaceratops.
Ornithopod Dinosaurs from the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument Region, Utah, and Their Role in Paleobiogeographic and Macroevolutionary Studies
Terry A. Gates,Eric K. Lund,Clint A. Boyd,Donald D. DeBlieux,Alan L. Titus,David C. Evans,Michael A. Getty,James I. Kirkland,Jeffrey G. Eaton +8 more
- 01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: The recognition of this diverse ornithopod fauna within southern Utah provides a rare opportunity in North America to examine the transition from more basal iguanodontians to those taxa within Hadrosauridae, and these sediments provide a testing ground for biogeographic hypotheses of basal Ornithopods.
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Nasutoceratops titusi (Ornithischia, Ceratopsidae), a basal centrosaurine ceratopsid from the Kaiparowits Formation, southern Utah
TL;DR: Nasutoceratops titusi provides insights into the origins of Centrosaurinae and suggests the existence of a previously unknown clade of short-snouted, long-horned centrosaurines that is hypothesize to have originated in the southern Western Interior Basin of North America.