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DVL-0062Specimen Record
AI Reconstruction of Hadrosaurus foulkii, generated in 2026

Hadrosaurus

Hadrosaurus foulkii

HAD-roh-SORE-us FOWL-kee-eye

Hadrosaurus foulkii holds the distinction of being the first dinosaur skeleton discovered in North America and the first dinosaur ever mounted for public display. Found in New Jersey in 1858, this duck-billed herbivore revolutionized our understanding of dinosaurs as animals that could stand upright on two legs.

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Hadrosaurus foulkii was the first dinosaur skeleton ever mounted for public display, unveiled in Philadelphia in 1868

About

Hadrosaurus foulkii was a medium-sized dinosaur that roamed the coastal plains of eastern North America during the Late Cretaceous, approximately 78-80 million years ago. As a herbivore, it possessed the characteristic duck-bill and of hundreds of tightly packed teeth that made hadrosaurids such successful plant-eaters, capable of processing tough vegetation with remarkable efficiency.

This dinosaur likely spent much of its time on all fours while foraging but could rise onto powerful hind legs to reach higher vegetation or flee from predators. The forelimbs were notably shorter than the hindlimbs, a feature that Joseph Leidy recognized in 1858 when he reconstructed Hadrosaurus in a pose—a revolutionary interpretation at a time when dinosaurs were imagined as sprawling, lizard-like creatures.

The discovery site in Haddonfield, New Jersey, represented a nearshore marine environment, suggesting Hadrosaurus inhabited coastal woodlands and river deltas. The fossil's excellent preservation in marl deposits provided an unusually complete skeleton for its era.

Hadrosaurus foulkii's historical significance cannot be overstated. It was the first reasonably complete dinosaur skeleton found in North America and, when mounted at the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia in 1868, became the world's first mounted dinosaur skeleton. This sparked a global fascination with dinosaurs that continues today. New Jersey honors this legacy by designating Hadrosaurus foulkii as its official state dinosaur.

First described1858
Discovered byWilliam Parker Foulke
Type specimenANSP 10005, Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University, Philadelphia

Where Hadrosaurus Roamed

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During the Late Cretaceous, approximately 79 million years ago, *Hadrosaurus foulkii* inhabited the eastern coastal plains of the ancient landmass Appalachia, a forested island continent separated from western North America by the vast Western Interior Seaway. This warm, humid region featured lush subtropical vegetation along meandering river deltas and estuaries that drained into the shallow Atlantic coastal waters.

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