order ornithischia
A paleontologist carefully examines the fossilized pelvis of an order ornithischia dinosaur.
Noun: - A taxonomic order of extinct herbivorous dinosaurs: "Order Ornithischia" refers to a major group of dinosaurs characterized by a bird-like hip structure. This order includes diverse families such as armored dinosaurs, bone-headed dinosaurs, horned dinosaurs, and duck-billed dinosaurs.
- This term is used exclusively in scientific contexts, specifically in paleontology and zoological taxonomy, to classify a specific branch of dinosaur evolution.
- It is always capitalized as it is a proper taxonomic name.
- order Ornithischia
- order Ornithischia
- order Ornithischia.
- Phylogenetic context: In cladistics, Ornithischia is defined as a clade including all dinosaurs more closely related to than to birds (which evolved from Saurischian dinosaurs).
- "Ornithischian" as an adjective: The derived adjective is commonly used.
- The museum displayed several ornithischian skeletons.
- Ornithischian (noun): A member of the order Ornithischia.
- Ankylosaurs were heavily armored ornithischians.
- Ornithischian (adjective): Of or relating to the order Ornithischia.
- The ornithischian hip structure is a key identifying feature.
- Bird-hipped dinosaurs: A common descriptive synonym referencing the defining pelvic anatomy.
This term has a single, specific meaning in scientific classification. It does not have everyday or figurative meanings.
Members of the Order Ornithischia are universally characterized by: - A predentary bone at the front of the lower jaw. - A pelvis where the pubis bone points backward, parallel to the ischium (retroverted pubis), superficially resembling a bird's pelvis. - They were herbivorous.
A paleontologist carefully examines the fossilized pelvis of an order ornithischia dinosaur.
- extinct terrestrial reptiles having bird-like pelvises: armored dinosaurs (thyreophorans); boneheaded and horned dinosaurs (marginocephalians); duck-billed dinosaurs (euronithopods)