Plesiolophus, new parasaurolophin hadrosaur from Oldman Formation of Alberta

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Ben Creisler

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Jul 10, 2026, 11:35:27 AM (7 days ago) Jul 10
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Ben Creisler

A new paper:
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Plesiolophus warnerensis gen. et sp. nov.

Bradley D. McFeeters, David C. Evans, Michael J. Ryan, and Hillary C. Maddin (2026)
A new parasaurolophin dinosaur (Hadrosauridae: Lambeosaurinae) from the Oldman Formation of southern Alberta
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 63: 1–23
doi: https://doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2026-0013
https://cdnsciencepub.com/doi/10.1139/cjes-2026-0013


Lambeosaurines are abundant in the Dinosaur Park Formation of Alberta, but are poorly known from the underlying Oldman Formation (Upper Cretaceous: Campanian). A new partial skull roof and braincase from the Comrey Sandstone Zone (middle Oldman) at the Milk River Ridge Reservoir locality in southern Alberta represents the first diagnostic material of an adult lambeosaurine from this formation. Derived characters of the frontal platform and braincase (including the steeply inclined frontal platform, boomerang-shaped dorsal surface of the frontals, and pendent alar processes of the basisphenoid) support the referral of this specimen to Parasaurolophini, as the stratigraphically lowest specimen with the skull roof and braincase preserved. The recognition of a new taxon is supported by a unique combination of characters, some resembling the inferred plesiomorphic condition for corythosaurians, including a triangular plateau on the parietal separating the interfrontal process from the sagittal crest, and the anterolaterodorsal orientation of the postorbital process of the laterosphenoid. Despite the large size and fused interfrontal contact, the prefrontal–postorbital contact is not strongly elevated, and the posterior margin of the frontal platform does not overhang the parietal, resembling the condition described in an immature Parasaurolophus from Dinosaur Provincial Park, and providing support for heterochrony in the evolution of the parasaurolophin skull roof. As one of relatively few diagnostic Albertan hadrosaurids older than the Dinosaur Park Formation, the new taxon provides significant new data on the diversification of Corythosauria, and the evolution of hadrosaurid communities in Laramidia.

Tyler Holmes

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Jul 10, 2026, 1:34:30 PM (7 days ago) Jul 10
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Would anyone happen to have a PDF of this one?

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Thomas Richard Holtz

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Jul 10, 2026, 3:42:24 PM (7 days ago) Jul 10
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Thomas R. Holtz, Jr.
Email: tho...@umd.edu         Phone: 301-405-4084
Principal Lecturer, Vertebrate Paleontology

Office: CHEM 1225B, 8051 Regents Dr., College Park MD 20742

Dept. of Geological, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences, University of Maryland
http://www.geol.umd.edu/~tholtz/

Phone: 301-405-6965
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Faculty Director, Science & Global Change Program, College Park Scholars

Office: Centreville 1216, 4243 Valley Dr., College Park MD 20742
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                        Thomas R. Holtz, Jr.
                        Department of Geological,

                            Environmental, and Planetary Sciences
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