Everything about Megalosaurus totally explained
Megalosaurus (meaning "Great Lizard", from
Greek,
μεγαλο-/megalo- meaning 'big', 'tall' or 'great' and
σαυρος/sauros meaning 'lizard') is a
genus of large meat-eating
theropod dinosaurs of the Middle
Jurassic Period (
Bathonian) of Europe (Southern
England,
France,
Portugal).
Discovery
Megalosaurus was the first
dinosaur to be described. Part of a bone was recovered from a limestone quarry at Cornwell near
Chipping Norton,
Oxfordshire, England in 1676. The fragment was sent to
Robert Plot, Professor of Chemistry at the
University of Oxford and first curator of the
Ashmolean Museum, who published a description in his
Natural History of Oxfordshire in 1677. He correctly identified the bone as the lower extremity of the
femur of a large animal and he recognized that it was too large to belong to any known species; he considered it to be the thigh bone of a giant. The bone has since been lost but the illustration is detailed enough to identify it clearly as the femur of a
Megalosaurus.
The Cornwell bone was described again by
Richard Brookes in 1763. He named it
Scrotum humanum, while describing its similar appearance to a pair of human testicles. The label wasn't considered to be a "name" for the animal in question at the time, and wasn't used in subsequent literature. Technically, the name was published after the advent of
binomial nomenclature, and although this name theoretically had priority over
Megalosaurus, the rules of the
ICZN state that if a name falls into disuse for 50 years after publication, it's no longer in competition for priority. Therefore, the name
Scrotum humanum is a
nomen oblitum, or "forgotten name".
More discoveries were made, starting in 1815, again at the
Stonesfield quarry. They were acquired by
William Buckland, Professor of Geology at the
University of Oxford and dean of
Christ Church. He didn't know to what animal the bones belonged but, in 1818, after the
Napoleonic Wars, the
French comparative anatomist
Georges Cuvier visited Buckland in Oxford and realised that the bones belonged to a giant
lizard-like creature. Buckland then published descriptions of the bones in
Transactions of the Geological Society, in 1824 (
Physician James Parkinson had described them in an article in 1822).
By 1824, Buckland had a piece of a lower jaw with teeth, some
vertebrae, and fragments of
pelvis,
scapula and hind limbs, probably not all from the same individual. Buckland identified the organism as being a giant animal related to the
Sauria (lizards) and he placed it in the new genus
Megalosaurus, estimating the animal to be 12 m long in life. In 1826,
Ferdinand von Ritgen gave this dinosaur a complete binomial,
Megalosaurus conybeari, which wasn't used by later authors and is now considered a
nomen oblitum. A year later, in 1827,
Gideon Mantell included
Megalosaurus in his geological survey of southeastern England, and assigned the species its current binomial name,
Megalosaurus bucklandii. It wouldn't be until 1842 that
Richard Owen coined the term 'dinosaur'.
In 1997, a famous group of fossilised footprints (
ichnites) was found in a limestone quarry at Ardley, 20 km Northeast of
Oxford,
England. They were thought to have been made by
Megalosaurus and possibly also some left by
Cetiosaurus. There are replicas of some of these footprints, set across the lawn of
Oxford University Museum of Natural History.
Description
Since those first finds, many other
Megalosaurus bones have been recovered but still no complete skeleton has been found. Therefore, the details of Megalosaurus's physical appearance can't be certain.
Early reconstructions
In 1852,
Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins was commissioned to a build a model of
Megalosaurus for the exhibition of dinosaurs at the Crystal Palace, which is still there to this day. Early paleontologists, never having seen such a creature before, reconstructed it like the dragons of popular mythology, with a huge head and walking on all fours. It wasn't until the middle of the nineteenth century, when other theropods began to be discovered in North America, that a more accurate picture was developed. Some confusion still exists, for at one time (before classification of dinosaurs became the serious business it's today), all theropods from Europe were given the title Megalosaurus. Since then, these have mostly been reclassified but older papers can still cause confusion. For further confusion, the most reproduced anatomy diagram of a Megalosaurus' skeleton was produced before any vertebrae had been recovered. While drawing it,
Friedrich von Huene of the
University of Tübingen,
Germany, instead used the backbones of
Altispinax, a mysterious big theropod known from high-spined dorsal vertebrae and at times classified as a
spinosaur. Hence, many later drawings, based on his original, show
Megalosaurus with a deep spinal ridge or even a small sail, like that of
Spinosaurus.
Modern reconstructions
In fact,
Megalosaurus did have a relatively large head and the teeth were clearly that of a
carnivore. However, the long tail would have balanced the body and head and so
Megalosaurus is now restored as a
bipedal beast—like all other
theropods—about nine meters in length. The structure of the
cervical vertebrae suggests that its neck would have been very flexible. To support its weight of around one
tonne, the legs were large and muscular. Like all theropods, it had three forward facing toes and a single reversed one. Although they hadn't reached the minuscule size of later theropods like
Tyrannosaurus, the fore limbs of
Megalosaurus were small and probably had three or four digits.
Living in what is now Europe, during the Jurassic Period (181 to 169 million years ago),
Megalosaurus may have hunted
stegosaurs and
sauropods. Repeated descriptions of
Megalosaurus hunting
Iguanodon (another of the earliest dinosaurs named) through the forests that then covered the continent are probably inaccurate, because
Iguanodon skeletons are found in much younger Early
Cretaceous formations. No fossils assignable to
Megalosaurus have been discovered in
Africa, contrary to some outdated dinosaur books.
Although
Megalosaurus was a powerful carnivore and could probably have attacked even the largest sauropods, it's also likely that it gained some of its food by scavenging. That isn't to detract from its prowess as a hunter (
Tyrannosaurus probably did much the same). Efficiency was necessary to feed such a large body.
There is a good descriptive display of
Megalosaurus and of the history of discovery, in the
Oxford University Museum of Natural History.
Inaccurate attributions
At one time,
Megalosaurus was a '
wastebasket genus', used to classify many different kinds of large theropods.
Dilophosaurus (External Link
),
Eustreptospondylus (External Link
), and
Metriacanthosaurus (External Link
) were all initially believed to be species of
Megalosaurus. In recent years, the genus has been subject to extensive reconsideration and most of the extraneous species have been removed.
In Popular Media
Megalosaurus has the distinction of being the first dinosaur to appear in any popular media.
Charles Dickens's novel
Bleak House begins with a description of fog, whose primordial character is emphasized by mention of
Megalosaurus. It has made a variety of other appearances as well. A
Megalosaurus was one of the main dinosaurs featured in
John Brosnan's 1984 novel,
Carnosaur though it wasn't featured in its
film adaptation. In the TV Show
Dinosaurs, Earl Sinclair, the father, is a
Megalosaurus. It also appears in the
Doctor Who book, "The Last Dodo" by
Jacqueline Rayner.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Megalosaurus'.
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