• Source: Harebell Formation
  • The Harebell Formation is a Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) geologic formation in Wyoming which outcrops in parts of the Yellowstone National Park. Dinosaur remains diagnostic to the genus level are among the fossils that have been recovered from the formation.


    Discovery of the first dinosaur found in Yellowstone


    In 1966, Joseph Leonard Weitz discovered specimen USNM PAL 768805, a right distal premaxillary tooth of a tyrannosaur, from Big Game Ridge, an outcrop of the Harebell Formation within Yellowstone National Park and catalogued it as specimen W-66-1-8A until it was moved to the United States Geological Survey Paleontology collection in Denver, Colorado and was catalogued as specimen D704.
    A letter dated 16 November 1966 from J. D. Love to Dr. G. Edward Lewis mentioned that they knew that the tooth was the first dinosaur fossil known from the Yellowstone National Park, and Love (1973) placed USNM PAL 768805 within the Deinodontidae, while Harris et al. (1996) instead listed the tooth as belonging to the Tyrannosauridae.
    The specimen was renamed to USMN PAL 768805 in 2021 when it was moved to the Paleobiology Collections of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History. The tooth was assigned to cf. Tyrannosaurus sp. by Hodnett et al. (2023), who also suggested that it was the shed tooth of a juvenile.


    Paleofauna


    ? Leptoceratops sp. (neoceratopsia indet)
    Saurexallopus loevei
    Prodesmodon sp.
    Ceratopsidae ident.
    Iguanodontidae ident.
    ? Nodosauridae
    Tyrannosauridae ident. (identified as Deinodontidae)
    cf. Tyrannosaurus sp.
    Ornithischia ident.
    Amia sp.
    Crocodylidae ident.


    See also



    List of dinosaur-bearing rock formations
    List of stratigraphic units with few dinosaur genera


    Footnotes




    References


    Weishampel, David B.; Dodson, Peter; and Osmólska, Halszka (eds.): The Dinosauria, 2nd, Berkeley: University of California Press. 861 pp. ISBN 0-520-24209-2.

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