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Past & Current Projects
1/11/08
Leptoceratops gracilis
Garfield Co., MT
Hell Creek Formation

Description: This project features fossils from Leptoceratops gracilis, collected in the same layer at a channel deposit. Leptoceratops teeth are found in numbers at this site, though not as common as any other dinosaur (even T-rex). Currently, we have found several teeth, a parietal (center section of the frill), and a left dentary. We will add to this page as we find more elements from this small This is a very rare set of fossils from the Hell Creek Formation.

Leptoceratops (meaning 'lean-horned face' and derived from Greek 'lepto-/λεπτο-' meaning 'small', 'insignificant', 'slender', 'meagre' or 'lean', 'cerat-/κερατ-' meaning 'horn' and '-ops/ωψ' meaning face) was a primitive ceratopsian dinosaur genus from the Late Cretaceous Period of what is now Western North America, at the same time as its giant relatives Triceratops and Torosaurus. Its skulls have been found in Alberta, Canada and in Wyoming. It could probably stand and run on its hind legs. Leptoceratops was around 2 meters long and could have weighed anywhere between 68 kilograms and even 200 kilograms.

The first small ceratopsian named, Leptoceratops was discovered in 1910 (and described four years later), by Barnum Brown in the Red Deer Valley in Alberta, Canada. The first specimen had a part of its skull missing, however there have been later well-preserved finds by C. M. Sternberg in 1947, including one complete fossil (a very rare find indeed). There has been later material found in 1978 in Bighorn Basin in northern Wyoming. The type species is L. gracilis. In 1942, material collected in Montana was named Leptoceratops cerorhynchos but this was later renamed Montanoceratops.

For information on Leptoceratops, see the links below.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leptoceratops
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/2601001/2601001.ch22.pdf
http://www.richardjbutlerphd.com/PDF/phylogeny.pdf
http://fm1.fieldmuseum.org/aa/Files/pmakovicky/Xu_et_al_2002b.pdf
http://app.pan.pl/acta48/app48-261.pdf
Below is the Leptoceratops gracilis left dentary, discovered on 1/4/2008.













Below is the Leptoceratops gracilis parietal, discovered in 2007.





Below is a group of Leptoceratops gracilis teeth. Discovered in 2007