2018
DOI: 10.1002/ar.23988
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New Reconstruction of Cranial Musculature in Ornithischian Dinosaurs: Implications for Feeding Mechanisms and Buccal Anatomy

Abstract: The charismatic and diverse ornithischian dinosaurs exhibited some of the most extreme examples of cranial anatomy, inspiring decades of investigation into their muscular anatomy. Current ornithischian jaw muscle reconstructions, although parsimonious, pose concerns of small adductor muscles and caudally displaced insertions relative to mandibular proportions. Here, craniomandibular material of ornithischian genera spanning all subclades is reexamined for osteological correlates indicative of intracranial and … Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(68 citation statements)
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“…2011; Hummel & Clauss 2011; Barrett 2014; Wings 2014; Erickson et al . 2016; Nabavizadeh 2020). When dental evolution is considered in herbivorous lineages of amniotes, high rates of oral processing and food ingestion are linked to the appearance of high‐crowned dentitions, in which precise dental occlusion is enabled by extensive wear, and hardened dental tissues increase resistance (Janis & Fortelius 1988; Sander 1999; Kaiser et al .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2011; Hummel & Clauss 2011; Barrett 2014; Wings 2014; Erickson et al . 2016; Nabavizadeh 2020). When dental evolution is considered in herbivorous lineages of amniotes, high rates of oral processing and food ingestion are linked to the appearance of high‐crowned dentitions, in which precise dental occlusion is enabled by extensive wear, and hardened dental tissues increase resistance (Janis & Fortelius 1988; Sander 1999; Kaiser et al .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Muscle scarring is much less developed in the expanded frills of coronosaurs. Current reconstructions of jaw muscles in these animals place the jaw adductor origins closer to the rostral edge of the supratemporal fenestra, along the midline keel of the frill, and along the inner surface of the squamosal, with the majority of the frill, including its caudal margin, free of musculature (Dodson, 1996; Nabavizadeh, 2018). These differences in frill anatomy between early and late diverging ceratopsians prompted Makovicky (2012) and Makovicky and Norell (2006) to propose that the ceratopsian frill underwent a shift in its primary function within Neoceratopsia from providing an increased area for attachment of jaw adductor muscles as (Haas, 1955; Lull, 1908; Ostrom, 1964; Xu et al., 2002), to serving as a species‐specific display structure with possible social and/or sexual functions (Dodson, 1976, 1993, 1996; Farlow & Dodson, 1975; Hone, Naish, & Cuthill, 2012; Hone et al., 2016; Horner & Goodwin, 2006, 2008; O'Brien et al., 2018; Padian & Horner, 2011; Sampson, Ryan, & Tanke, 1997).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Museumhoused skulls of herbivorous dinosaurs were examined either firsthand (in person or using photographs) or referenced from the literature (see Supporting Information Table S1; nearly half of taxa used were only studied by referencing previously published descriptions while the rest additionally were either studied in person or with photographs provided). Using previous knowledge of muscle attachment sites (e.g., Holliday, 2009;Nabavizadeh, 2018; see below for more detailed account of muscle reconstruction references), anatomical traits were chosen according to their correspondence to muscle architecture. Cranial traits are examined qualitatively, including those of the temporal region and supratemporal fenestra (e.g., rostrocaudal breadth of supratemporal bar; transverse breadth of the temporal region), the adductor chamber and infratemporal fenestra (e.g., correlates of volume and muscle body orientation), the quadrate (e.g., muscle attachment and how its orientation informs us of muscle architecture), maxilla-jugal junction (e.g., how it bounds the rostral extent of temporal muscle mandibular insertion), overall palatal breadth and plane (e.g., to show volume and breadth of palatal muscle origin), the presence or absence of an epipterygoid, and the paroccipital processes.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mediolateral attachment sites of mAME along the coronoid elevation have been described for heterodontosaurids (Norman et al, ; Sereno, ), thyreophorans (Haas, ; Lautenschlager et al, ), pachycephalosaurs (Sues and Galton, ), and ornithischians as a whole (Nabavizadeh, , ). Crompton and Attridge () noted differences in muscle body sizes among ornithischians.…”
Section: Temporal Musculaturementioning
confidence: 99%
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