Page:Parasaurolophus walkeri, a new genus and species of trachodont dinosaur.pdf/24

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Pectoral Girdle

PECTORAL GIRDLE

The girdle consists of the scapulae and coracoids as usual in the dinosaurs. Sternal bones were not found.

Scapula–This bone is unusually heavy and wide in the blade and it is firmly united with the coracoid. The photograph (Plate III) and the comparative measurements will serve to define it.[1]

COMPARATIVE MEASUREMENTS OF SCAPULA



Parasaurolophus
walkeri

Corythosaurus
casuarius

Kritosaurus
incurvimanus

Saurolophus
osborni

Total length 940 890 776 800
Maximum width of blade 248 200 189 220
Width at articular end 235 214
Length of glenoid cavity 125 110
Width of glenoid cavity 75 64

It will be observed that the scapula is of greater length than that of Saurolophus: it is surpassed only by that of Claosaurus annectens (970 mm.). It shows a greater width of blade than any other form of which I can find a description.

Coracoid (Fig. 3)–Neither of the coracoids is well preserved: the left is in better condition and is shown, with considerable adjustment, in Figure 3. The bone is firmly united with the scapula and the foraminal notch is closed as in all trachodonts with the exception of Kritosaurus. The following rather uncertain measurements indicate the size of the bone. The glenoid cavity has a transverse width of

  1. Owing to disregard of an erratum slip accompanying Barnum Brown’s paper on Saurolophus osborni, some of the measurements quoted in University of Toronto Studies, Geological Series, No. 11, are transposed. In the table on page 41 of that study, II should read Saurolophus osborni, III Trachodon mirabilis, and IV Claosaurus annectens.