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Paleobiota of the Morrison Formation
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The Morrison Formation is a distinctive sequence of Late Jurassic sedimentary rock that is found in the western United States, which has a wide assortment of taxa represented in its fossil record, including dinosaur fossils in North America. It is composed of mudstone, sandstone, siltstone and limestone and is light grey, greenish gray, or red. Most of the fossils occur in the green siltstone beds and lower sandstones, relics of the rivers and floodplains of the Jurassic period.

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Plants
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The Morrison Formation is devoid of flowering plants; during the Jurassic, the Earth was dominated by ferns, seed ferns, and a wealth of gymnosperms—such as cycads, ginkgos, and conifers. Vegetation varied from river-lining forests of conifers, tree ferns, and ferns (gallery forests), to fern savannas with occasional trees such as the Araucaria-like conifer Brachyphyllum.[1][2]
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Conifers
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Ginkgos
Cycadophyta and relatives
Gnetales
Invertebrates
Arthropods
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Vertebrates
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Fish
Although the paleoclimate of the Morrison formation was semiarid with only seasonal rainfall, there were enough bodies of water to support a diverse ichthyofauna.[10] Although abundant, fish remains are constrained to only certain locations within the formation.[10] Microvertebrate sites in Wyoming are dominated by fish remains.[10] Indeterminate ray-finned fish remains have been recovered from Ninemile Hill and a microvertebrate site in the Black Hills.[10] Found in stratigraphic zones 2, 4, and 5.[11] Morrison actinopterygians generally have no close modern relatives.[10] The Wyoming microvertebrate remains are extracted from the sediment by screenwashing.[10] Paleoniscoid remains are geographically present in the western part of Colorado, where remains have been recovered from "a level above the Mygatt-Moore Quarry."[10] Largely complete remains of small individuals have been consistently recovered for over 15 years.[10] Single tooth fossil of pycnodont fish is represented from Dinosaur National Monument in Utah,[12] found in stratigraphic zone 4.[11] Dipnoan remains found at a fossil site not far from Cañon City, Colorado.[10] Remains usually in a state of rather complete preservation.[10] Halecostome remains are geographically present in the western part of Colorado, where remains have been recovered from "a level above the Mygatt-Moore Quarry."[10] Largely complete remains of small individuals have been consistently recovered for over 15 years.[10] Amiid remains found in stratigraphic zones 2, 3, and 4.[11] Found at a fossil site not far from Cañon City, Colorado.[10] Remains usually in a state of rather complete preservation.[10]
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Amphibians

Frogs are known from several sites in the Morrison Formation, but are not particularly well represented.[18] The history of Morrison anuran discoveries began with the recovery of remains from Quarry 9 near Como Bluff, Wyoming. The new genus Eobatrachus was erected for some of these remains by O. C. Marsh, but the material was later considered non-diagnostic. Decades later another dubious anuran genus, Comobatrachus, was erected based on additional fragmentary remains. Despite the erection of multiple new names, only two frog species are currently recognised from the Morrison: Enneabatrachus hechti[19] and Rhadinosteus parvus.[20]
In addition to formally named taxa, indeterminate anuran remains have been recovered from Morrison strata in Colorado, Wyoming, and Utah, with the best specimens found in Dinosaur National Monument and Quarry 9.[18] Stratigraphically speaking, indeterminate anurans have been found in stratigraphic zones 2 and 4.[11] Indeterminate anurans with remains diagnostic down to the family level have also been reported from the Morrison, with pelobatids being represented by the ilium of an unnamed and indeterminate species, which was recovered from Quarry 9.[21] Pelobatids are present in stratigraphic zones 5 and 6.[11]
Indeterminate salamander remains are present in stratigraphic zones 2, 4, and 5.[11] A distinctive type of salamander known only as Caudata B is present in stratigraphic zone 6.[11]
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Sphenodonts
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Squamates
Numerous squamate remains have been found in the sediments of the Morrison Formation, most commonly at sites in Utah, Colorado and Wyoming. A number of taxa have been described, coming from three different groups: anguimorph and scincomorph lizards and early snakes.[27][28][29] The first squamates to be reported from the Morrison Formation were Paramacellodus and Dorsetisaurus, which were described from Wyoming's Quarry 9 by Don Prothero and Richard Estes.[27] Later remains would include Diablophis, originally described as a species of Parviraptor by Susan Evans in 1996[30] but subsequently moved to the new genus Diablophis by Michael Caldwell et al. in 2015, with extra material also being reported from Utah's Cisco Mammal Quarry, and Schillerosaurus, originally described as "Schilleria" and reported from Dinosaur National Monument by Evans and Dan Chure in 1999.[31] Two later additions to the Morrison's squamate assemblages are Eoscincus and Microteras, two scincomorph lizards found at Dinosaur National Monument and Como Bluff's Quarry 9, respectively. They were described by Chase Brownstein et al. in 2022.[28] Indeterminate squamate remains have currently been described from Dinosaur National Monument.[31]
The majority of modern-day scincomorph lizards are small insectivores that feed on a range of invertebrates.[32] It is thought that their counterparts from the Morrison Formation would have occupied a similar niche due to their morphological similarities. Anguimorph lizards most likely hunted small vertebrates, and Diablophis is thought to have done so too. Prey items would have included the other squamates from the formation as well as its large diversity of small mammals. All squamates might have been prey for the larger predators of the Morrison Formation, including the abundant theropod dinosaurs and crocodilians.
Turtles
Turtles (Testudines) are very common fossils in the Morrison, due to their bony shells. The most common were Glyptops plicatus (very common) and Dinochelys whitei (also common, but not as common as Glyptops). Also present were Dorsetochelys buzzops and Uluops uluops.
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Choristoderes
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Crurotarsans
Crocodiles of a variety of sizes and habitats were common Morrison animals. Cursorial mesosuchians, or small terrestrial running crocs, included Hallopus victor and Fruitachampsa callisoni. More derived crocodilians included Diplosaurus ferox, Amphicotylus, Hoplosuchus kayi, and Macelognathus vagans.
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Pterosaurs
Pterosaurs are very uncommon fossils in the Morrison, because the fragility of their thin walled bones often prevented their remains from being preserved.[48] Despite being uncommon they are geographically widespread;[49] indeterminate pterosaur remains have been found in stratigraphic zones 2 and 4-6.[11] In addition to indeterminate remains, several species have been identified from both the rhamphorhynchoids (long-tailed pterosaurs) and pterodactyloids (short-tailed pterosaurs).[48] Since the 1970s and 80s, pterosaur finds have become more common, but are still rare.[48] Most Morrison pterosaurs have been found in marine and shoreline deposits.[48] Pterosaur tracks have been found in both the Tidwell and Saltwash members.[48] Morrison pterosaurs probably lived on fish, insects and scavenged dinosaur carcasses, or even foraged for prey, and actively hunted;[48] they are fairly ecologically diverse, ranging from small hawking insectivore Mesadactylus to the raptorial Harpactognathus. While relatively few pterosaur genera are named from the Morrison Formation, fragmentary material that is not referrable to the genus level suggests the presence of dsungaripteroids, ctenochasmatids, dimorphodontids, and more tentatively wukongopterids and pteranodontians.[50][51][52][53]
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Dinosaurs
Mammaliaforms
Many types of mammaliaform cynodonts, mostly early mammals, are known from the Morrison; almost all of them were small sized animals, though occupying a very large variety of ecological niches, from the more rodent-like multituberculates to the carnivorous eutriconodonts (including the possibly volant Triconolestes) to the anteater-like Fruitafossor. Unclassified types include the digger Fruitafossor windscheffelia. Docodonts included the common genus Docodon, represented by D. victor, D. striatus, and D. superbus, and Peraiocynodon sp. Multituberculates, a common type of early mammal, were represented by Ctenacodon serratus, C. laticeps, C. scindens, Glirodon grandis, Morrisonodon brentbaatar, Psalodon fortis, ?P. marshi, P. potens, and Zofiabaatar pulcher. Triconodonts present included Amphidon superstes, Aploconodon comoensis, Comodon gidleyi, Priacodon ferox, P. fruitaensis, P. gradaevus, P. lulli, P. robustus, Triconolestes curvicuspis, and Trioracodon bisulcus.
Tinodontids were represented by Eurylambia aequicrurius (probably Tinodon), and Tinodon bellus (including T. lepidus). Finally, two families of Dryolestoidea were present: Paurodontidae, including Comotherium richi, Euthlastus cordiformis, Paurodon valens, and Tathiodon agilis; and Dryolestidae, including Amblotherium gracilis, Dryolestes obtusus (common genus), D. priscus, D. vorax, Laolestes eminens, L. grandis, and Miccylotyrans minimus.
In 2009, a study by J. R. Foster was published which estimated the body masses of mammals from the Morrison Formation by using the ratio of dentary length to body mass of modern marsupials as a reference. Foster concludes that Docodon was the most massive mammaliaform genus of the formation at 141g and Fruitafossor was the least massive at 6g. The average Morrison mammal had a mass of 48.5g. A graph of the body mass distribution of Morrison mammal genera produced a right-skewed curve, meaning that there were more low-mass genera.[57]
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Tinodontids
Eutriconodonts
Multituberculates
Others
Dryolestoids
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See also
Footnotes
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