Paleontology Glossary
159 essential terms and definitions for paleontology and dinosaur science.
Anatomy & Morphology
15 termsTerms related to dinosaur body structure, skeletal features, and physical characteristics.
Appendicular Skeleton
The bones of the limbs and their supporting girdles (pectoral and pelvic). Differences in appendicular โฆ
Axial Skeleton
The central supporting column of the body, comprising the skull, vertebral column, ribs, and sternum. โฆ
Clade
A group of organisms consisting of a common ancestor and all its descendants. Dinosauria, Theropoda, โฆ
Cranial Crest
A bony projection on the top of the skull, often used for display, species recognition, โฆ
Dermal Armor
Protective bony or keratinous elements embedded in or growing from the skin. Ankylosaurs are the โฆ
Fenestra
An opening or window in the skull. Dinosaur skulls typically have multiple fenestrae that reduce โฆ
Gastralia
Belly ribs found in theropods and some other archosaurs. These thin bony elements helped support โฆ
Nasal Horn Core
The bony base beneath a horn, composed of bone rather than keratin. In ceratopsians like โฆ
Opisthopubic Pelvis
A pelvic configuration in which the pubis points backward, characteristic of ornithischian dinosaurs and also โฆ
Osteoderms
Bony deposits forming scales, plates, or other structures in the skin. Found in ankylosaurs, stegosaurs, โฆ
Pneumaticity
The presence of air-filled cavities in bones, connected to the respiratory system. Found in theropods โฆ
Postcranial
All skeletal elements behind and below the skull. Postcranial anatomy includes the vertebral column, limbs, โฆ
Predentary Bone
A small unpaired bone at the tip of the lower jaw, unique to ornithischian dinosaurs. โฆ
Supraorbital
Located above the eye socket. Supraorbital ridges or horns are prominent in many theropods and โฆ
Thagomizer
The spiked tail arrangement of stegosaurid dinosaurs. The term was coined from a Far Side โฆ
Stratigraphy & Dating
15 termsTerms related to geological time, rock layers, and methods for determining the age of fossils.
Assemblage Zone
A stratigraphic interval characterized by a specific combination of fossil taxa. Dinosaur assemblage zones help โฆ
Biostratigraphy
The use of fossil organisms to date and correlate rock layers. Index fossils that lived โฆ
Correlation
The process of matching rock layers of the same age from different locations. Paleontologists use โฆ
Facies
A body of rock with characteristic features reflecting the environment in which it was deposited. โฆ
Formation
A distinct rock unit with consistent characteristics, often named for the location where it was โฆ
Impact Winter
The hypothesized period of global cooling following the Chicxulub asteroid impact, caused by dust and โฆ
Index Fossil
A fossil of an organism that lived for a short, well-defined time period and is โฆ
Iridium Anomaly
An unusually high concentration of the element iridium in geological layers corresponding to the K-Pg โฆ
K-Pg Boundary
The geological boundary marking the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction 66 million years ago. An asteroid impact โฆ
Lagerstรคtte
An exceptional fossil deposit with unusually high preservation quality or quantity. The Yixian Formation in โฆ
Mesozoic Era
The Age of Reptiles spanning 252 to 66 million years ago. Divided into three periods: โฆ
Radiometric Dating
Methods using the decay of radioactive isotopes to determine the absolute age of rocks and โฆ
Superposition
The principle that in undisturbed rock sequences, lower layers are older than upper layers. This โฆ
Taphonomy
The study of what happens to organisms after death, including decay, burial, and fossilization processes. โฆ
Unconformity
A surface representing a gap in the geological record where erosion or non-deposition occurred. Unconformities โฆ
Paleobiology
15 termsTerms related to dinosaur behavior, ecology, physiology, and life history.
Bite Force
The amount of force exerted by the jaws during biting. T. rex had an estimated โฆ
Brood Parasite
An organism that lays its eggs in another species nest. Some oviraptorosaur behavior has been โฆ
Coprolite
Fossilized feces that provide direct evidence of dinosaur diet. Analysis can reveal plant material, bone โฆ
Display Structure
A morphological feature whose primary function is visual communication โ attracting mates, intimidating rivals, or โฆ
Ectotherm
An organism that relies on external heat sources to regulate body temperature. Early interpretations cast โฆ
Endothermy
The ability to generate internal body heat (warm-blooded). Evidence increasingly suggests many dinosaurs were endothermic โฆ
Feeding Strategy
The suite of behaviors and adaptations an animal uses to obtain food. High-browsing sauropods, low-cropping โฆ
Gastrolith
Stones swallowed by dinosaurs (particularly sauropods) to aid in grinding food in the gizzard, similar โฆ
Gigantothermy
A passive form of thermal regulation in which a large body mass retains heat due โฆ
Gregarious Behavior
Living or moving in groups. Bone beds containing hundreds of individuals, as in Centrosaurus, are โฆ
Homeotherm
An organism that maintains a constant body temperature regardless of environmental fluctuations. Many theropods, particularly โฆ
Locomotor Adaptation
Structural modifications that enhance a particular mode of movement. Long metatarsals in ostrich-like ornithomimids are โฆ
Nesting Colony
A site where multiple dinosaurs nested together. Discovered in hadrosaurs (Maiasaura) and sauropods, providing evidence โฆ
Sound Production
The ability to generate acoustic signals for communication. The hollow cranial crest of Parasaurolophus could โฆ
Trace Fossil
Evidence of biological activity preserved in rock, including footprints, trackways, burrows, and feeding marks. Trackways โฆ
Evolution & Classification
15 termsTerms related to dinosaur evolution, taxonomy, and phylogenetic relationships.
Adaptive Radiation
The rapid diversification of an ancestral lineage into many ecological niches following an opportunity such โฆ
Archosauria
The group that includes dinosaurs, pterosaurs, crocodilians, and birds. Archosaurs are distinguished by skull openings, โฆ
Autapomorphy
A derived character state unique to a single taxon, not shared with close relatives. The โฆ
Convergent Evolution
When unrelated organisms independently evolve similar features. Dolphins, ichthyosaurs, and sharks all evolved streamlined body โฆ
Dinosauromorpha
The group containing dinosaurs and their closest relatives. Includes dinosauriforms like Marasuchus and Silesaurus that โฆ
Homoplasy
The independent evolution of similar features in unrelated lineages. Crests evolved independently in multiple dinosaur โฆ
Monophyletic
A grouping that includes an ancestor and all of its descendants, forming a complete natural โฆ
Mosaic Evolution
The concept that different features of an organism evolve at different rates. Archaeopteryx shows a โฆ
Paraphyletic
A grouping that includes an ancestor but excludes some of its descendants. 'Reptilia' in its โฆ
Phylogenetics
The study of evolutionary relationships among organisms. Cladistic analysis of anatomical and molecular data reconstructs โฆ
Plesiomorphy
An ancestral character state retained from earlier ancestors and shared broadly across a group. Five-fingered โฆ
Polyphyletic
A grouping whose members do not all share the same immediate common ancestor, assembled from โฆ
Sister Group
The closest evolutionary relative of a given taxon, sharing an immediate common ancestor. Birds and โฆ
Synapomorphy
A shared derived character state inherited from a common ancestor, used to define a clade. โฆ
Fieldwork & Excavation
15 termsTerms related to fossil discovery, excavation techniques, and specimen preparation.
Articulated Skeleton
A fossil skeleton found with bones still in their natural anatomical positions. Far more informative โฆ
Associated Skeleton
A set of bones found together and inferred to belong to the same individual, though โฆ
Bone Bed
A concentration of fossil bones in a single geological layer. Mass death assemblages at bone โฆ
CT Scanning
Computed tomography used to image the internal structure of fossils without damaging them. Reveals brain โฆ
Disarticulated
A fossil assemblage in which bones have been separated from their anatomical positions before or โฆ
Impression Fossil
A fossil formed when an organism leaves an imprint in sediment that later hardens to โฆ
Microfossil
A fossil that requires magnification to study, typically less than 1 mm in size. Dinosaur โฆ
Mold and Cast
A mold fossil preserves the shape of an organism as a negative impression; a cast โฆ
Permineralization
The most common form of fossilization, in which minerals carried by groundwater fill the pore โฆ
Plaster Jacket
A protective shell of burlap and plaster applied around fossils in the field to prevent โฆ
Preparation
The careful removal of rock matrix from a fossil using tools ranging from dental picks โฆ
Quarry Map
A detailed spatial record of fossil positions, orientations, and rock layers at an excavation site. โฆ
Screen Washing
A field technique in which sediment is washed through fine mesh screens to recover tiny โฆ
Taphonomic Bias
The systematic distortion of the fossil record due to preservation factors. Large-bodied, heavily-built animals are โฆ
Type Specimen
The original specimen used to define and name a new species. The holotype is the โฆ
Dinosaur Groups
20 termsTerms describing the major taxonomic groups, clades, and families within Dinosauria.
Alvarezsauridae
Bizarre coelurosaur theropods with a single massive thumb claw and vestigial other fingers. Alvarezsaurids are โฆ
Ankylosauria
Heavily armored ornithischian dinosaurs with extensive osteoderms covering the body. Many ankylosaurs, such as Ankylosaurus, โฆ
Brachiosauridae
Sauropods with forelimbs longer than hindlimbs, giving them a giraffe-like stance. Brachiosaurus could raise its โฆ
Ceratopsia
The clade of horned dinosaurs, including Triceratops, Protoceratops, and Styracosaurus. Ceratopsians are characterized by the โฆ
Diplodocidae
Long-necked sauropods with whip-like tails and peg-shaped teeth. Diplodocus and Apatosaurus are classic diplodocids; their โฆ
Dromaeosauridae
The family of small to medium raptors, including Velociraptor and Deinonychus. Dromaeosaurids possessed a hyperextendable โฆ
Hadrosauridae
The duck-billed dinosaurs, a diverse family of ornithopod herbivores. Hadrosaurs like Edmontosaurus and Parasaurolophus are โฆ
Heterodontosauridae
Small, early ornithischians characterized by differentiated teeth โ incisors, canine-like tusks, and cheek teeth. Heterodontosaurids โฆ
Iguanodontia
A broad clade of ornithopod dinosaurs ancestral to hadrosaurs. Iguanodon, one of the first dinosaurs โฆ
Ornithischia
One of the two major dinosaur orders, characterized by a bird-like (opisthopubic) hip structure. Ornithischians โฆ
Ornithomimidae
Ostrich-like coelurosaur theropods with toothless beaks, long necks, and slender cursorial limbs. Ornithomimus and Gallimimus โฆ
Oviraptoridae
Crested theropods with parrot-like toothless beaks. Long misidentified as egg-thieves, oviraptorids are now known to โฆ
Pachycephalosauria
Bipedal ornithischians with dramatically thickened, domed skulls. The dome of Pachycephalosaurus could be up to โฆ
Sauropoda
The clade of long-necked, quadrupedal herbivorous saurischians. Sauropods include the largest terrestrial animals that ever โฆ
Spinosauridae
Large semi-aquatic theropods with elongated snouts adapted for catching fish. Spinosaurus aegyptiacus, the largest carnivorous โฆ
Stegosauria
Ornithischian dinosaurs with distinctive rows of plates or spines running along the back and tail. โฆ
Theropoda
The clade of bipedal, predominantly carnivorous saurischian dinosaurs. Theropods include T. rex, Velociraptor, and Spinosaurus, โฆ
Titanosauria
The most diverse sauropod clade, dominating the Cretaceous worldwide. Titanosaurs range from modest-sized Saltasaurus, which โฆ
Troodontidae
Small, highly encephalized theropods with large eyes and sickle claws. Troodontids had among the highest โฆ
Tyrannosauridae
The family of large coelurosaur theropods, including T. rex, Tarbosaurus, and Albertosaurus. Tyrannosaurids are characterized โฆ
Locomotion & Biomechanics
20 termsTerms related to how dinosaurs moved, their posture, and the mechanical principles underlying locomotion.
Bipedal
Moving habitually on two legs. All theropods were bipedal, as were most early ornithischians. Bipedalism โฆ
Cursorial
Adapted for fast running. Cursorial adaptations include elongated metatarsals, a narrow foot, and reduced digit โฆ
Digitigrade
Walking on the toes with the heel raised off the ground. Theropods were digitigrade, giving โฆ
Facultative Quadruped
An animal capable of moving on either two or four legs. Some hadrosaurs and iguanodontians โฆ
Furcula
The wishbone, formed by the fusion of the clavicles. Present in many theropods including T. โฆ
Graviportal
A locomotor style adapted for carrying great body mass rather than speed, characterized by columnar โฆ
Hallux
The innermost (first) digit of the foot, the equivalent of the human big toe. In โฆ
Kinetic Skull
A skull in which the bones can move relative to each other, increasing gape or โฆ
Obligate Biped
An animal that can only move on two legs due to anatomical constraints. T. rex โฆ
Opisthocoelous
Vertebrae with a convex front and concave rear articulation surface. Opisthocoelous cervical vertebrae in sauropods โฆ
Plantigrade
Walking with the entire sole of the foot on the ground. Some sauropods had semi-plantigrade โฆ
Pneumatic Bone
Bone containing air-filled chambers connected to the respiratory system via diverticula. Extensively developed in sauropod โฆ
Procoelous
Vertebrae with a concave front and convex rear articulation surface. Procoelous vertebrae are common in โฆ
Pubic Boot
An expanded, foot-like process at the distal end of the pubis in some theropods. The โฆ
Pygostyle
A fused structure of tail vertebrae at the end of the tail in birds and โฆ
Quadrupedal
Moving on four legs. Large sauropods, ceratopsians, and ankylosaurs were obligate quadrupeds. Quadrupedal stance distributes โฆ
Sacral Vertebrae
The vertebrae fused into the sacrum, connecting the spine to the pelvic girdle. Large theropods โฆ
Semilunate Carpal
A half-moon-shaped wrist bone found in maniraptoran theropods and birds. The semilunate carpal enabled the โฆ
Thecodont Dentition
Teeth set in deep sockets in the jawbone, the condition found in all dinosaurs and โฆ
Ungual
The terminal claw bone of a digit. Unguals are highly variable among dinosaurs โ the โฆ
Reproduction & Growth
15 termsTerms related to how dinosaurs reproduced, laid eggs, raised young, and grew from hatchling to adult.
Allometry
Non-proportional growth where different body parts grow at different rates. The disproportionately large skull of โฆ
Brooding
Sitting on eggs to incubate them. Oviraptorosaurs like Oviraptor and Citipati are known from specimens โฆ
Clutch Size
The number of eggs laid in a single nesting event. Dinosaur clutch sizes range from โฆ
Eggshell Microstructure
The crystallographic and structural properties of the eggshell, visible under a microscope. Eggshell microstructure distinguishes โฆ
Fibrolamellar Bone
A rapidly deposited bone tissue with a fibrous matrix containing many vascular canals. Its presence โฆ
Growth Ring
A line of arrested growth (LAG) in bone cross-sections, analogous to tree rings. Counting growth โฆ
Hadrosaur Nesting Ground
A communal nesting site used repeatedly by hadrosaurs across multiple breeding seasons. The Egg Mountain โฆ
Histology
The microscopic study of tissue structure. Bone histology is a primary tool for estimating dinosaur โฆ
Juvenile Morphology
The body proportions and structural features characteristic of young dinosaurs. Juveniles typically had proportionally larger โฆ
Medullary Bone
A temporary bone tissue forming inside long bones of female birds during egg-laying. Medullary bone โฆ
Neoteny
The retention of juvenile features into adulthood. Some small theropods show neotenic features โ large โฆ
Ontogeny
The developmental history of an individual organism from embryo to adult. Ontogenetic studies reveal that โฆ
Senescent
Relating to an old individual showing signs of aging. Senescent dinosaurs sometimes show bone pathologies, โฆ
Sexual Dimorphism
Differences in size or morphology between males and females of the same species. Identifying sexual โฆ
Subadult
A growth stage between juvenile and fully mature adult. Many dinosaur features โ the nasal โฆ
Paleoecology
15 termsTerms related to the ecological relationships, environments, and communities of dinosaurs.
Coprolite Analysis
The chemical and physical examination of fossilized feces to reconstruct diet. A large coprolite attributed โฆ
Ectothermy vs Endothermy Debate
The long-running scientific discussion over whether dinosaurs were warm-blooded or cold-blooded. Modern consensus holds that โฆ
Gigantism
The evolution of exceptionally large body size. Dinosaur gigantism in sauropods may have been driven โฆ
Herd Behavior
Coordinated movement or social grouping of multiple individuals. Sauropod and hadrosaur trackways showing parallel travel โฆ
Island Dwarfism
The evolutionary reduction in body size of large animals isolated on islands, driven by limited โฆ
Mesozoic Flora
The plant communities that coexisted with dinosaurs. Conifers, cycads, ginkgoes, ferns, and horsetails dominated early โฆ
Migration
Seasonal long-distance movement between habitats. Isotopic analysis of dinosaur teeth suggests some large herbivores, like โฆ
Niche Partitioning
The division of ecological resources among co-existing species to reduce competition. In Late Jurassic North โฆ
Pack Hunting
Coordinated cooperative hunting by multiple predators. Pack hunting has been proposed for Deinonychus based on โฆ
Paleo-Biogeography
The study of the geographic distribution of ancient organisms and how continental drift, sea-level changes, โฆ
Paleotemperature
The estimated temperature of ancient environments, reconstructed from isotopic proxies, plant fossils, and sediment types. โฆ
Predator-Prey Ratio
The proportion of predatory to herbivorous species in an ecosystem. Dinosaur faunas show lower predator-to-prey โฆ
Scavenging
Feeding on carcasses of animals that died of other causes. Whether large theropods like T. โฆ
Stable Isotope Analysis
Analysis of ratios of stable isotopes (carbon, oxygen, nitrogen) in fossil teeth and bones to โฆ
Tooth Wear Analysis
Examination of microscopic scratches and pits on tooth surfaces to infer diet. Phytosaurs and herbivorous โฆ
Modern Paleontology
15 termsTerms related to cutting-edge techniques and concepts in contemporary paleontological research.
3D Photogrammetry
Creating precise three-dimensional digital models of fossils from photographs taken at multiple angles. Photogrammetry enables โฆ
Ancient DNA
Genetic material recovered from fossil or sub-fossil specimens. Ancient DNA degrades rapidly at ambient temperatures; โฆ
Bayesian Phylogenetics
A statistical approach to phylogenetic inference that incorporates prior probabilities and produces probability distributions over โฆ
Cladistic Analysis
A method of classification that groups organisms based on shared derived characters. Cladistic analysis of โฆ
Collagen Preservation
The survival of original protein fragments in fossilized bone. Collagen sequences have been recovered from โฆ
Crown Group
The clade comprising the living members of a group, their last common ancestor, and all โฆ
Digital Endocast
A virtual model of the brain and inner ear made from CT scans of the โฆ
Finite Element Analysis
A computational engineering method applied to fossil bones to model how forces were distributed during โฆ
Ghost Lineage
A lineage inferred to have existed from phylogenetic evidence but lacking fossil documentation. Ghost lineages โฆ
Laser-Stimulated Fluorescence
A technique using ultraviolet or violet lasers to reveal soft-tissue outlines and feather impressions in โฆ
Lazarus Taxon
A taxon that appears in the fossil record, disappears for a significant interval, then reappears. โฆ
Molecular Phylogenetics
Reconstructing evolutionary trees using molecular sequence data rather than or in addition to morphology. Applied โฆ
Parsimony
The principle of preferring the evolutionary tree that requires the fewest evolutionary changes to explain โฆ
Stem Group
All fossil relatives of a living group that fall outside the crown group. Non-avian dinosaurs โฆ
Synchrotron Scanning
High-energy X-ray imaging at particle accelerator facilities that reveals microscopic structures inside fossils non-destructively. Synchrotron โฆ