Abstract Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences
Vol. 25:
435-489
(Volume publication date May 1997)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.earth.25.1.435)
THE ORIGIN AND EVOLUTION OF DINOSAURS
Paul C. Sereno
Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637; e-mail: dinosaur@uchicago.edu
▪ Abstract Phylogenetic studies and new fossil evidence have yielded fundamental insights into the pattern and timing of dinosaur evolution and the emergence of functionally modern birds. The dinosaurian radiation began in the Middle Triassic, significantly predating the global dominance of dinosaurs by the end of the period. The phylogenetic history of ornithischian and saurischian dinosaurs reveals evolutionary trends such as increasing body size. Adaptations to herbivory in dinosaurs were not tightly correlated with marked floral replacements. Dinosaurian biogeography during the era of continental breakup principally involved dispersal and regional extinction.