ORDER YIII 



DINOSAURIA 



231 



against anterior face of tibia ; distal tarsals represented by three small 

 flattened bones. C. longipes, Wagner. 



Ilallojms, Marsh. A small form apparently 

 related to the preceding. Fore-limb relatively 

 Short and with four digits. Astragalus without p ^s C%:Tii^r-lis 



Comjisogmdhm longipcs, W;igner. Lithographie Stone ; Kelheim, 

 Bavaria. Skeleton, 1/4 (after A. Wagner). 



ascending process ; calcaneum produced into a 

 power of leaping. Upper Jura ; Colorado. 



Fig. 333. 

 Compsognathus longipes, 

 Wagner. Left hind foot, Vi- 

 F, Fibula ; mt, Metatarsals ; T, 

 Tibia ; t2.t5, Distal tarsals 

 (after Baur). 



heel," suggestive of the 



Family 3. Ooeluridae. Marsh. 



SkuU unknown ; vertehrae and all other bones of the skeleton hoUow. Cervical 

 ribs fused with their centra. Neural canoJl greatly enlarged. Metatarsals very long 

 and slender. Upper Jura and AVealden. 



Coelurus, Marsh (Aristosuchus, Seeley). Known only by portions of the ver- 

 tebral column, pelvis, and limb bones. Centra, neural arches, and all processes 

 of the vertebrae have hollow interiors, and the neural arches are suturally 

 united with their centra. In the cervical and trunk regions the neural canal is 

 greatly dilated. Upper Jura ; Wyoming and Maryland. Wealden ; England. 



Thecospondylus, Seeley ; Calamospondylus, Lydekker. Wealden ; England. 

 Tichosteus, Cope. Upper Jura ; Colorado. All these names apply to detached 

 vertebrae. According to Cope, the peculiar vertebrae described by von Meyer 

 from the Muschelkalk of Bayreuth under the name of Tanysti'opheus, and 

 occurring also in the Trias of New Mexico, belong to this family. 



Sub-Order 2. SAUROPODA. Marsh. (Cetiosauria.) ^ 



More or less massive, herbivorous, quadrupedal Dinosaurs. Skull relatively small, 

 antorbital vacuity large. Brain-case completely ossißed ; no predentary bone. Teeth 



^ Literature : 



Hatcher, J. ß., Di]ilo(locus, Marsh (Mem. Carnegie Museum, vol. I.), 1901. — Marsh, 0. C, The 

 Dinosaxirs of North America (16th Ann. Kep. U.S. Geol. Snrv.), l896.—Osborn, H. F., Additioual 

 characters of the great herbivorous Dinosaur, Camarasaurus (Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist. vol. X. 

 p. 219), 1898.— A Skeleton of Diplodocus (Mem. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist. vol. I. pt. V.), 1899.— 

 Phillipfi. J., Geology of Oxford and the Valley of the Thames. Oxford, 1871. 



