The generic name Dysganus is derived from the Greek roots dys- meaning “bad” and -ganos for tooth enamel, the full name meaning “rough enamel”. The specific name for the type species, D. encaustus, means “burnt in” based on the concave tooth tip. The other species named by Cope have several meanings. D. bicarinatus means “two keels” after the 2 keels running down the length of the type teeth.[5]D. haydenianus was named after American paleontologist and biologist Ferdinand V. Hayden.[2] Lastly, D. peiganus was named after the Peigan Native Americans of Montana, where the type was found.[5][2]
History and species
Dysganus was first described by American Paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope in 1876 with Dysganus encaustus as the type species based on several fragmentary teeth, believing it was a small herbivorous dinosaur related to Cionodon and Hadrosaurus.[2] Cope also named the species D. haydenianus, D. bicarinatus, and D. peiganus based on solely fragmentary teeth.[2] The fossils had been collected from the Campanian strata of the Judith River Formation east of the Judith River in Montana by Charles Sternberg and company.[2] The type specimens of each species consist of one to eight teeth, all being detached and likely from different individuals. Cope named Dysganus during the Bone Wars, his competition with Yale paleontologist Othniel Charles Marsh, to collect and describe as many fossil taxa as possible. This competition caused the two to publish small papers on finds that hadn't been properly named or analyzed, contributing to taxonomic issues later on. All of the specimens described by Cope were later sold to the American Museum of Natural History in New York after Cope's death where they remain today.[5] Some of the teeth like those of D. peiganus were said by Cope to be more similar to those of Palaeoscincus, while others more akin to Cionodon and Trachodon.[2] Cope also referred teeth collected by David Baldwin from the Upper Cretaceous of the San Juan Basin in northwestern New Mexico, stating they were similar to those of D. encaustus.[3] These likely were the teeth of hadrosaurids and even tyrannosaurids.[6][4] In 1907, John Bell Hatcher redescribed the teeth of Dysganus, and found that the genus' teeth were composed of those from Hadrosaurs and Ceratopsids making it a chimera and nomen dubium.[1]William Matthew at the AMNH later designated holotype teeth due to their chimeric and composite nature.[1]
Type:
Dysganus encaustus Cope, 1876; Single maxillary tooth, though originally included 5 additional teeth. Dubious at the Ceratopsia level.[1]
Species previously referred to Dysganus:
D. bicarinatus Cope, 1876; Single maxillary tooth, originally included seven others from various areas of the skull. Dubious at the Ceratopsia level.[1]
D. haydenianus Cope, 1876; Single maxillary tooth, originally included two others and bone shards. Dubious at the Ceratopsia level.[1]
D. peiganus Cope, 1876; Single tooth from the anterior dentary. Hypothesized to be ankylosaurian,[7] stegosaurid,[8] or hypsilophodontid,[9] but it is actually an unworn Ceratopsian tooth.[1]
Classification
Cope originally classified Dysganus in Trachodontidae, a family of hadrosauroids now considered a junior synonym of the family Hadrosauridae.[10] In 1901, Franz Nopcsa von Felső-Szilvás assigned Dysganus to the Ceratopsia, either by reading Cope's original descriptions of the genus or by Cope in 1890 indirectly suggesting that Dysganus was a ceratopsian rather than a "trachodontid". Later in 1907, Hatcher et al. republished Cope's original descriptions of Dysganus in their entirety and deduced that the holotype of D. encaustus included teeth of hadrosaurids (then trachodontids), and the teeth of ceratopsids.[1] The teeth of D. peiganus were thought to be from a stegosaurian by Lull and Wright in 1942.[9] However, later analysis by Walter Coombs and Peter Galton demonstrated that all of the teeth were of ceratopsian nature, just from different parts of the mouth and at different stages of erosion.[1]
^ abcdefgE. D. Cope. 1876. Descriptions of some vertebrate remains from the Fort Union Beds of Montana. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 28:248-261.
^ abCope, E. D. (1885). The relations of the Puerco and Laramie deposits. American Naturalist, 19, 985-986.
^ abCarr, T. D., & Williamson, T. E. (2000). A review of Tyrannosauridae (Dinosauria, Coelurosauria) from New Mexico. New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin, 17, 113-145.
^Hunt, A. P., Lucas, S. G., & Mateer, N. J. (1992, September). Charles H. Sternberg and the collection of Late Cretaceous vertebrate fossils from the San Juan Basin, New Mexico. In San Juan Basin IV: New Mexico Geological Society, Forty-third Annual Field Conference (pp. 241-250).
^COOMBS, W. P. (1978). The families of the ornithischian dinosaur order Ankylosauria.
^Hatcher, J. B. (1907). The ceratopsia (No. 310). US Government Printing Office.
^ abLull, R.S. & Wright, N.E. (1942). "Hadrosaurian Dinosaurs of North America". Geological Society of America Special Papers. 40: 27–28.
^Stanton, T.W.; Hatcher, J.B.; Knowlton, F.H. (1905). Walcott, C.D. (ed.). "Geology and Paleontology of the Judith River Beds: With a Chapter on Fossil Plants". United States Geological Survey Bulletin. 8 (157): 90.
^Cope, E.D. (1879). Hayden, F.V. (ed.). "The Relations of the Horizons of Extinct Vertebrata". United States Geological and Geographical Survey. 5 (1): 37–38.