Aristosuchus

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Aristosuchus
Temporal range: Early Cretaceous
Sacrum and pubes of Aristosuchus pusillus
Scientific classification
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Aristosuchus
Binomial name
Aristosuchus pusillis
Seeley, 1876

Aristosuchus was a small coelurosaurian dinosaur, whose name was derived from the Greek ąριστον (bravest, best, noblest) and σουχος, the Ancient Greek corruption of the name of the Egyptian crocodile-headed god). It shared many characteristics with birds.

Aristosuchus was a bipedal, meat-eating (carnivorous) theropod dinosaur. This predator is thought to have been about 2 meters in length (about 6.5 feet) and is estimated to have weighed about 30 kg (about 65 lbs). It was found in deposits from the Early Cretaceous of England, on the Isle of Wight, i.e. from about 125 million years ago.

It was similar to its close relative Compsognathus in appearance and size and some authors have argued that it belongs to that genus. It has also been confused with Calamospondylus (e.g. Reverend William Darwin Fox (1805-1881), in 1866) but, on the basis of the pubis, it is considered to be a valid compsognathid. Since some species are only represented by a few skeletal fragments, this sort of discussion is not uncommon in dinosaur palaeontology. Aristosuchus is known from a sacrum, a pubis, a femur and a few vertebrae. The femur of Aristosuchus has a wing-like anterior trochanter and a markedly reduced fourth trochanter. Two ungual phalanges were found nearby, which may have been from the same animal and would suggest long claws.

The type species, Aristosuchus pusillis, was described in 1876, by Richard Owen and named Poekilopleuron pusillus. Harry Govier Seeley (1839-1909) gave it the name Aristosuchus, in 1887.

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