Abstract

Dinosaur fossils are becoming increasingly well-known from the Bauru Basin of Brazil, and represent some of the last occurring dinosaurs in South America before the end-Cretaceous mass extinction. However, sampling across the basin is not uniform, and comparatively little is known about the fossils from the northern part of the basin. Our fieldwork team discovered two isolated and well-preserved ziphodont theropod teeth from northern basin strata of the Maastrichtian Marília Formation of the south of the state of Goiás. We here identify them using quantitative analysis of morphometric data and comparisons to teeth previously described in the literature. Our comparisons and analyses indicate that they can be assigned to Abelisauridae. These specimens have little evident crown enamel ornamentation, a characteristic widely present in the teeth of theropods from the Southern Hemisphere. The materials described here are the northernmost Bauru Basin abelisaurids reported so far, demonstrating that these carnivorous dinosaurs were important faunal components across the extent of the basin, as they were in other regions of South America.

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