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It will be?
I live in Patagonia.
I have information on a fosil with different teeth (eyeteeth of carnivore and molares of hervívoro).
Until today I could not determine to that species corresponds.
I need that a professional (Paleontólogo) writes me to verify if is a Heterodontosaurus.
Please Urgent.
Victor Feildman
mentario@hotmail.com
Feathers?
Shouldn't Heterodontosaurus have feathers, after all Tianyulong does.
DeinonychusDinosaur999 (talk) —Preceding undated comment added 23:08, 19 July 2010 (UTC).
It's probable, but not as solidly bracketed as it is for, say, Deinonychus. We're dealing with a sample size of at most two ornithischains with feathers that may or may not be homologous. Still... it would be a fairly safe bet. MMartyniuk (talk) 02:57, 20 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Right, but we know that the group ancestral to "raptors" also had feathers, since every group down the tree from them up until carnosaurs have them, and they're all clearly the same structures. With heterodontosaurs, there's still a slight possibility that the feathers of Tianyulong and Psittacosaurus are not the same structure. It's a slim possibility but it's there. Also, we have evidence from species that are within the same phylogenetic bracket that lack feathers, like hadrosaurs. I'm not saying the current picture is accurate, or even likely, just that it can't be proven inaccurate (unlike, say, a featherless Graciliraptor). MMartyniuk (talk) 02:41, 21 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The quill-less image had other problems, for example a short tail and quadrupedal posture, so I have replaced it with one that fixes those issues and adds quills. FunkMonk (talk) 20:46, 24 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Per WP:GAREV, only registered editors are allowed to open and conduct GA reviews. Unfortunately, that means that this review cannot proceed, and is being closed, with the nomination returned to the GA reviewing pool. 2604:2000:B949:A000:91A6:C9B7:837E:EFD1, I would like to suggest that you register and get an account, but also that you gain a few months of editing experience before you attempt your next review with that account. (It is the rare article indeed that has no typos or grammatical issues, and I see no sign that it was checked for close paraphrasing, words to watch, image licensing, or that the article accurately represented its source material.) Not that I have any reason to doubt the authors, but that the reviewer needs to check all of the good article criteria. Sorry, FunkMonk; this will have to wait for a qualified reviewer. BlueMoonset (talk) 03:06, 30 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
The most complete skeleton, SAM-PK-1332, belonged to an individual measuring about 1.18 m in length My personal feeling after reading this was like, are you describing the individual (or more appropriately the specimen) the skeleton must have depicted or someone who has the skeleton in their collection? I know it is the former, just hinting at a reword.
indicates that Heterodontosaurus could grow substantially larger – up to a length of 1.75 m and a body mass of nearly 10 kg. I think it would be better to say "could have grown" and "and with a body mass".
The skull of Heterodontosaurus was relatively small but robustly built; it was 108 mm long in the holotype specimen (SAM-PK-K337) When did you first mention this holotype specimen or its code explicitly? Oh, I just found it under Discovery. But it should be first explained here, not in Discovery.
Seems the links "lower temporal fenestra" and "upper temporal fenestra" go for the same destination... so the latter becomes a duplink. So I think the latter should be deleted. Saw such a case for the first time.Sainsf<^>Talk all words07:49, 2 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Well, these are to separate skull openings, and two separate terms. How should the reader know that the second is explained in the linked article of the first? I would keep both, as it can really help the reader to understand. --Jens Lallensack (talk) 08:16, 2 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
during the 1961-1962 British-South African expedition to South Africa and Basutoland (former name of Lesotho) I think it is better to write "the British-South African expedition to South Africa and Basutoland (former name of Lesotho) in 1961-1962".
The genus name refers to the differentiated dentition, which is unusual for an ornithischian dinosaur, Repetition? Why not just say "its unusual dentition"?
Heterodontosauridae was defined as a clade by Sereno in 1998 and 2005, and the group shares skull features such as three or fewer teeth in each premaxilla, caniniform teeth followed by a diastema, and a jugal horn below the eye Many terms need explanation here.
Who is Richard Butler? Actually there are so many names in this article that I am tired of pointing them out, please check for any instances I might have missed out where you have not identified the persons.
This surface indicates that food procession was achieved by forwards/backwards movements of the jaws I think "the back and forth movement" or "forward-and-backward" reads better. There are several instances of this.
Nice, I've left a few issues for my co-nominator, Jens Lallensack, who I think can address them better. Should be easy to find the issues I've left; every bulleted sentence followed by another bullet instead of my answer... FunkMonk (talk) 12:32, 1 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
So, @FunkMonk: and @Jens Lallensack:, you guys have been too amiable and patient. And GA reviewing was never so funny (look at the first comment under Description). So I would not stop this budding FA anymore. Go out into the world, for you are a GA now! Cheers! Sainsf<^>Talk all words08:26, 2 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]