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DVL-0134Specimen Record
AI Reconstruction of Tenontosaurus tilletti, generated in 2026

Tenontosaurus

Tenontosaurus tilletti

ten-ON-toh-SORE-us TILL-et-eye

Tenontosaurus was a medium-sized ornithopod dinosaur famous for its remarkably long, stiffened tail that comprised over half its total body length. This Early Cretaceous herbivore is frequently found alongside remains of the raptor Deinonychus, providing crucial evidence for pack hunting behavior in dromaeosaurids.

Did you know?

Tenontosaurus's tail made up approximately 60% of its total body length—one of the longest proportional tails of any ornithopod dinosaur

About

Tenontosaurus tilletti was a robust dinosaur that inhabited the floodplains and forests of Early Cretaceous North America approximately 115 to 108 million years ago. Its most distinctive feature was an extraordinarily long tail, reinforced by a lattice of bony tendons that kept it rigid and elevated—a characteristic that inspired its name, meaning 'sinew lizard.' This tail accounted for more than half the animal's total length of 6 to 8 meters and likely served as a counterbalance during locomotion and possibly as a defensive weapon.

Tenontosaurus possessed a relatively small head with a beak for cropping vegetation, backed by rows of leaf-shaped teeth ideal for processing tough plant material. While primarily when foraging, its strong hindlimbs suggest it could rear up on two legs to reach higher vegetation or flee predators. The forelimbs were sturdy with five-fingered hands capable of supporting weight.

This dinosaur holds exceptional scientific importance due to its frequent association with Deinonychus antirrhopus fossils. Multiple sites in the Cloverly Formation preserve Tenontosaurus skeletons surrounded by Deinonychus teeth and remains, providing some of the most compelling evidence for cooperative hunting in non-avian dinosaurs. With over 50 known specimens ranging from juveniles to adults, Tenontosaurus is among the best-understood ornithopods of its time, offering invaluable insights into growth patterns, behavior, and predator-prey dynamics in Cretaceous ecosystems.

First described1970
Discovered byJohn H. Ostrom
Type specimenAMNH 3040, American Museum of Natural History

Where fossils were found

Cloverly Formation prehistoric landscape

Cloverly Formation

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Modern location

Montana, Wyoming, Oklahoma, Texas +2 more · United States

When it lived

115108 million years ago(7m year span)

Where Tenontosaurus Roamed

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During the Early Cretaceous, *Tenontosaurus tilletti* roamed the coastal lowlands of western Laramidia, a landmass that would later become North America, where lush floodplains and river systems bordered the nascent Western Interior Seaway as it began its transgression across the continent. This warm, humid environment supported dense fern prairies and conifer forests under a subtropical climate, providing ample forage for these herbivorous ornithopods.

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