Abstract

AbstractTracks of small quadrupedal ornithischians with five manual and four pedal digits have been recorded from sedimentary rocks near the Late Jurassic–Early Cretaceous (Tithonian–Berriasian) boundary in NE Thailand and British Columbia. These are compared with larger tracks of gracile, quadrupedal ornithopods from the earliest Cretaceous of Spain and smaller tracks of a quadruped of unknown age from Zimbabwe. The Thai and Canadian tracks are similar to the Early Jurassic (Liassic) ichnogenus Anomoepus and the small ornithopod tracks from the Late Jurassic of Spain. They are the only known post-Liassic ornithischian tracks in which up to five discrete manus digit impressions are clearly visible. Based on strong heteropody (manus much smaller than pes) in all cases we infer an ornithopod trackmaker rather than another ornithischian. The scattered, but widespread earliest Cretaceous occurrence of this ichnotaxon, herein assigned to Neoanomoepus perigrinatus ichnogen. and ichnosp. nov., on the basis of type material from Canada, suggests that these hitherto unknown earliest Cretaceous ichnofaunas may represent a radiation of small basal ornithopods (pes length less than 15 cm), appearing before the widespread radiation of large ornithopods (pes length up to 60 cm or more) later in the Neocomian (Valanginian–Barremian), Aptian–Albian and Late Cretaceous. The primitive condition of the trackmaker is indicated by the pedal and manual morphology, which consists of four and five digits respectively that are not enclosed by well-developed fleshy padding or integument. In contrast, all larger Cretaceous ornithopod tracks, mostly from post-Berriasian strata, have only three pedal digits enclosed in fleshy pads and a manus in which all functional digits are reduced and enclosed by substantial flesh.

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