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* Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EQ, UK
Chongqing Museum of Natural History, Pipashan Street 74, Chongqing 400013, Peoples Republic of China
* Author for correspondence: smai03{at}esc.cam.ac.uk
Seven genera of stegosaurian dinosaur have been named on the basis of material from the Upper Jurassic of China, and this represents a diversity of stegosaurs unparalleled around the world at this time. However, many of the original specimens used to diagnose and describe these species are currently unavailable, and the original descriptions and figures are often inadequate. The Chinese stegosaurs have proven unstable in the few cladistic analyses of Stegosauria that have been carried out, causing a loss of resolution in cladograms. Supplementary data on previously described specimens are presented here along with a taxonomic revision. Only Tuojiangosaurus multispinus, Chungkingosaurus jiangbeiensis and Gigantspinosaurus sichuanensis are considered to be valid taxa, with autapomorphies pertaining to features of the ilio-sacral blocks and dermal armour in all cases. The holotype specimen of Chialingosaurus kuani is a juvenile, bearing no diagnostic characters, and Monkonosaurus lawulacus is based on fragmentary and undiagnostic material. Changtusaurus and Yingshanosaurus have never been described or figured and their whereabouts are unknown, so they are regarded as nomina nuda. This taxonomic revision significantly reduces known stegosaurian diversity worldwide, and shows that the Chinese diversity was similar to that of Europe and North America in the Upper Jurassic. Previously, it had been suggested that the diversity of Chinese stegosaurs indicated an Asian origin for the clade, a claim that cannot now be upheld.
Key Words: Dinosauria Stegosauria Ornithischia China Upper Jurassic
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