Compare
DVL-0136Specimen Record
AI Reconstruction of Thescelosaurus neglectus, generated in 2026

Thescelosaurus

Thescelosaurus neglectus

THES-kel-oh-SORE-us

Thescelosaurus was a small, sturdy ornithopod that lived during the final years of the Age of Dinosaurs. This unassuming herbivore is famous for the specimen nicknamed 'Willo,' which was once controversially claimed to preserve a fossilized heart.

Did you know?

The specimen nicknamed 'Willo' made headlines in 2000 for allegedly preserving a fossilized heart, though later studies suggest it was actually a mineral concretion

About

Thescelosaurus was a robustly built, medium-sized dinosaur that inhabited the floodplains and forests of western North America during the latest Cretaceous Period, right up until the end-Cretaceous mass extinction. Measuring approximately 3.5 meters in length and weighing around 80 kilograms, it possessed a stocky body, relatively short but powerful hindlimbs, and a long, stiffened tail that provided balance during locomotion.

The skull featured a small, pointed beak at the front of the jaws, ideal for cropping vegetation, with rows of leaf-shaped teeth behind for processing plant material. Unusually for an ornithopod, Thescelosaurus had bony armor-like ossicles embedded in the skin along its back and flanks, suggesting some degree of protection against predators like Tyrannosaurus rex.

First described by Charles Gilmore in 1913 from a specimen found in Lance Formation deposits in Wyoming, Thescelosaurus was initially overlooked and its scientific name means 'wondrous lizard that was neglected.' The species gained unexpected media attention in 2000 when a specimen called 'Willo' was claimed to contain a preserved four-chambered heart, though subsequent CT studies have reinterpreted this structure as a concretion. Multiple well-preserved specimens make Thescelosaurus one of the best-known small ornithischians from the end of the Cretaceous, providing valuable insight into dinosaur diversity just before the asteroid impact.

First described1913
Discovered byCharles W. Gilmore
Type specimenUSNM 7757, Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History

Where fossils were found

Hell Creek Formation prehistoric landscape

Hell Creek Formation

+1 more formation

Explore β†’
Modern location

Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming Β· United States

When it lived

68–66 million years ago(2m year span)