TL;DR: A cladistic analysis of Stegosauria (the first to be based upon direct observation of all relevant specimens) is presented, which indicates that Tuojiangosaurus, Loricatosaurus and Paranthodon are sister taxa to Stegosaurus.
Abstract: Synopsis Stegosauria is a clade of ornithischian dinosaurs characterised by a bizarre array of dermal armour extending, in two parasagittal rows, from the cervical region to the end of the tail. Although Stegosaurus is one of the most familiar of all dinosaurs, little is known regarding the evolutionary history of this clade. Alpha‐level taxonomic revision of all proposed stegosaur taxa shows that 11 species of stego‐saur can be regarded as valid on the basis of autapomorphies. These are: Dacentrurus armatus and Loricatosaurus priscus (gen. nov.) from Europe; Kentrosaurus aethiopicus and Paranthodon afric‐anus from Africa; Tuojiangosaurus multispinus, Chungkingosaurus jiangbeiensis, Huayangosaurus taibaii, Gigantspinosaurus sichuanensis and Stegosaurus homheni (comb. nov.) from China; and Stegosaurus mjosi (comb. nov.) and Stegosaurus armatus from North America. A cladistic analysis of Stegosauria (the first to be based upon direct observation of all relevant specimens) is presented, which indicates that ...
TL;DR: A number of sites containing stegosaurian remains (bones and tracks) have been discovered in the Villar del Arzobispo Formation (Tithonian-Berriasian) in the Province of Teruel, Spain, mostly in the areas of El Castellar and Riodeva.
TL;DR: All specimens of the Stegosauridae from England are described as discussed by the authors, including the holotype femur of Omosaurus phillipsi Seeley (Oxfordian, Upper Jurassic, Yorkshire) is from a juvenile individual and is generically and specifically indeterminate.
Abstract: All specimens of the Stegosauridae from England are described. The material from the lower and upper Bathonian (Middle Jurassic) of Oxfordshire and Gloucestershire is the earliest record of the family. The holotype femur of Omosaurus vetustus Huene is tentatively referred to the genus Lexovisaurus Hoffstetter as L.? vetustus (Huene). Lexovisaurus durobrivensis (Hulke) includes Omosaurus durobrivensis Hulke, O. leedsi Seeley, and Stegosaurus priscus Nopcsa; it is represented by two partial skeletons and isolated bones from the Lower Oxford Clay (middle Callovian, Middle Jurassic) of Northamptonshire and Cambridgeshire. The dermal armor of Lexovisaurus consisted of large, thin plates with the height more than twice the anteroposterior width, in addition to at least one pair of parasacral spines. The holotype femur of Omosaurus phillipsi Seeley (Oxfordian, Upper Jurassic, Yorkshire) is from a juvenile individual and is generically and specifically indeterminate. Dacentrurus armatus (Owen) includes O...
TL;DR: The femoral shafts of stegosauria are columnar in lateral view as mentioned in this paper, a character that occurs only in sauropods and stegosaurs and some Cretaceous ankylosaurs and ornithopods.
Abstract: Five shafts of large long bones of dinosaurs have been found since 1846 in the Rhaetic Bone bed of the Westbury Formation (Upper Triassic) at Aust Cliff near Bristol, Avon, southwestern England. Two bones (1 lost) are Dinosauria incertae sedis and a third (also lost), the longest and best preserved, was probably part of a femur of the melanorosaurid prosauropod Camelotia (Upper Triassic, England). The width of the other two femoral shafts is greater transversely than anteroposteriorly, as in Camelotia. However, these shafts are also straight in lateral view, a derived character that occurs only in sauropods and stegosaurs and some Cretaceous ankylosaurs and ornithopods. However, the shafts are curved in lateral view in basal ankylosaurs and Jurassic ornithopods. Unlike the femora of Upper Jurassic sauropods and stegosaurs, in which the bone is almost solid, the Aust shafts consist of a thin layer of compact cortical bone surrounding a large area, most of which is filled with very lightly constructed cancellous bone. However, cross-sections of the humerus just below the deltopectoral crest of the sauropod Isanosaurus (Upper Triassic, Thailand) and the stegosaur Dacentrurus (Upper Jurassic, England) are intermediate in their histology. The femoral shaft is hollow in some Jurassic stegosaurs, though not to the degree shown by those from Aust. The Aust shafts are truly columnar, agreeing with those of stegosaurs in the apparent lack of a prominent fourth trochanter and of the associated posteromedial depression, structures which are prominent in sauropods. These two shafts, with estimated femoral lengths of about 1000-1100 mm, are tentatively referred to the Stegosauria so stegosaurs probably reached a large size in the Upper Triassic ; the earliest definitive record of the group is Middle Jurassic (Bathonian) of England.
TL;DR: The holotype of the small sauropod dinosaur Astrodon pusillus from the Kimmeridgian (Upper Jurassic) of Portugal is shown to be the remains of a juvenile individual of the stegosaur Dacentrurus.
Abstract: The holotype of the small sauropod dinosaur Astrodon pusillus Lapparent and Zbyszewski, 1957, from the Kimmeridgian (Upper Jurassic) of Portugal is shown to be the remains of a juvenile individual of the stegosaur Dacentrurus. The records of Astrodon from the Upper Jurassic of North America and the Lower Cretaceous of Africa are based on material of juvenile sauropods. However, teeth from the Lower Cretaceous of Portugal are correctly referred to Astrodon as A. valdensis (Lydekker). A review is presented of the intercontinental genera that the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous faunas of Western Europe shared with faunas of corresponding ages in North America and Africa.