Abstract

Ornithopod dinosaurs were a successful group before they became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous. They were present on every continent, though they were rare in the Southern Hemisphere. We present the results of our work on the brain of these dinosaurs as an attempt to determine which evolutionary trends affected it. Old and new technologies allow us to peer into the skull of long extinct animals and retrieve information about their brain. First we provide a short description of the brain of ornithopod dinosaurs from Europe and Asia, then we sum up the characteristics that can be gathered from it. The presence of valleculae helps us to assess the actual size of the brain with more confidence. The olfactory peduncles are large and these animals had a good sense of smell. There is a trend toward an increase in the size of the cerebral hemispheres, and a more straight-lined brain. The latter can be the result of the ontogeny and the size achieved by the adult animal on the development of the brain. Other characteristics, like the development of the cerebral hemispheres and the encephalization quotient, allude to Hadrosauridae having had cognitive abilities more developed than previously assumed. This is in adequacy with other data from the physical characteristics (e.g., crests) and the social life (e.g., living in herds, communal nests) of these dinosaurs, which denote high and complex behaviors like care for their young, sexual courtship, and gregariousness.

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