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DVL-0046Specimen Record
AI Reconstruction of Dryosaurus altus, generated in 2026

Oak Lizard

Dryosaurus altus

DRY-oh-SORE-us AL-tus

Dryosaurus was a swift, agile herbivore that roamed the Jurassic floodplains of North America alongside giants like Allosaurus and Diplodocus. Its slender build and long legs made it one of the fastest small dinosaurs of its era, relying on speed rather than armor for survival.

Did you know?

Dryosaurus had legs built for speed—its shinbones were 15% longer than its thighbones, a hallmark of fast-running animals

About

Dryosaurus altus was a graceful dinosaur that inhabited the lush river valleys and fern prairies of Late Jurassic North America approximately 155-150 million years ago. Standing about 1.2 meters tall at the hip and reaching lengths of 3-4 meters, this lightweight herbivore possessed a slender, athletic build perfectly adapted for rapid locomotion. Its elongated hind limbs, with tibiae longer than femora, indicate exceptional running capabilities—a crucial for evading formidable predators like Allosaurus and Ceratosaurus that shared its ecosystem.

The skull of Dryosaurus featured a distinctive beaked lacking teeth, ideal for cropping vegetation, while rows of leaf-shaped cheek teeth processed tough Jurassic plants. Large orbits suggest keen eyesight, likely beneficial for detecting approaching threats. The forelimbs were proportionally short with five-fingered hands, though the animal was obligately .

Discovered during the famous Bone Wars era, Dryosaurus remains have been recovered primarily from Dinosaur National Monument and other Morrison Formation localities. The genus holds scientific significance as a key representative of basal ornithopods, helping paleontologists understand the evolutionary trajectory leading to later ornithopods like Iguanodon and the hadrosaurs. Multiple growth stages are known, providing valuable insights into ornithopod and population dynamics in Jurassic ecosystems.

First described1876
Discovered bySamuel Wendell Williston
Type specimenYPM 1876, Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History

Where fossils were found

Morrison Formation prehistoric landscape

Morrison Formation

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Modern location

Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, Montana +6 more · United States

When it lived

155150 million years ago(5m year span)

Where Oak Lizard Roamed

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During the Late Jurassic, *Dryosaurus altus* roamed the semi-arid floodplains and riverine forests of the Morrison Formation in western Laurasia, a landscape characterized by seasonal wetlands, fern prairies, and conifer-lined waterways that stretched across what is now the American West, long before the Western Interior Seaway would divide the continent.

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