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Definition and Diagnosis Definition and Diagnosis
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Anatomy Anatomy
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Skull and Mandible Skull and Mandible
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Postcranial Skeleton Postcranial Skeleton
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Axial Skeleton Axial Skeleton
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Appendicular Skeleton Appendicular Skeleton
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Osteoderms Osteoderms
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Systematics and Evolution Systematics and Evolution
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Taphonomy Taphonomy
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Paleoecology and Behavior Paleoecology and Behavior
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Cite
Abstract
Stegosauria is recognized as a Jurassic clade of Ornithischia. Stegosaurs are medium-sized to large quadrupedal herbivores with proportionally small heads, short and massive forelimbs, long columnar hindlimbs, short metacarpals and metatarsals with hoof-like unguals. The largest stegosaur is Stegosaurus (up to 9 m) and is represented by numerous remains from the late Kimmeridgian or Tithonian of the United States, mostly from Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming. Stegosaurs are also characterized by parasagittal osteoderms, which developed as a double series of small plates and spines. The best known example of this configuration is Kentrosaurus, presumed to have carried fifteen paired plates and spines on its back, but only the position of the terminal pair of tail spines is fixed. The pattern of plates and spines is characteristic for each species, and it was probably important for intraspecific recognition.
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