Elaphrosaurinae

Elaphrosaurinae

† Elaphrosaurinae is a subfamily of ceratosaurian theropods (Noasauridae) that ranged from the Late Jurassic through the Late Cretaceous, with members known from Africa, Europe, and Australia. Lightly built, long-limbed carnivores, they were among the fastest runners of their respective ecosystems. Australian elaphrosaurines, known from fragmentary material, represent rare evidence of Gondwanan ceratosaurians outside South America. Their ecological role as small to medium cursorial predators is inferred from limb proportions.

Diet & Feeding

Carnivore

Elaphrosaurinae was a meat-eating predator. Carnivorous dinosaurs were active hunters or scavengers, equipped with sharp teeth and claws for catching and consuming prey. They occupied the top of the food chain in their ecosystems.

Time Period

Cretaceous Early Mesozoic Era

Elaphrosaurinae lived during the Cretaceous Early period of the Mesozoic Era, approximately 145.0 to 100.5 million years ago.

The Cretaceous saw continued dinosaur evolution with the rise of ornithopods and early ceratopsians. Flowering plants first appeared and began to transform terrestrial ecosystems. Spinosaurus and other large theropods lived during this time.

Discovery & Naming

खोज स्थान Australia

Quick Facts

भूवैज्ञानिक युग Cretaceous Early
आहार Carnivore

अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले प्रश्न

When did Elaphrosaurinae live?
Elaphrosaurinae lived during the Cretaceous Early period (Mesozoic Era, 145.0–100.5 million years ago).
What did Elaphrosaurinae eat?
Elaphrosaurinae was a carnivore.
Where were Elaphrosaurinae fossils found?
Fossils of Elaphrosaurinae were found in Australia.

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