Dilophosaurus

carnivoreEarly Jurassic (193 Ma)

PALAEONTOLOGICAL RECORD

Dilophosaurus is a genus of theropod dinosaurs that lived in what is now North America during the Early Jurassic, about 186 million years ago. Three skeletons were discovered in northern Arizona in 1940, and the two best preserved were collected in 1942. The most complete specimen became the holotype of a new species in the genus Megalosaurus, named M. wetherilli by Samuel P. Welles in 1954. Welles found a larger skeleton in the same region belonging to the same species in 1964. Realizing it bore crests on its skull, he assigned the species to the new genus Dilophosaurus in 1970, as Dilophosaurus wetherilli. The genus name means "two-crested lizard", and the species name honors John Wetherill, an explorer and amateur archeologist. Further specimens have since been found, including an infant. Fossil footprints have also been attributed to the animal, including resting traces. Another species, Dilophosaurus sinensis from China, was named in 1993, but was later found to belong to the genus Sinosaurus.

DISCOVERY

Discovered in 1942 in Arizona.

DIETARY PROFILE

Carnivore with a weakly muscled jaw, hypothesized to hunt fish or smaller prey.

NOTABLE PALAEONTOLOGY FACTS

  • The real animal did not spit venom or have a frill—those were pure InGen genetic artifacts.
  • It was actually the apex predator of the Early Jurassic, reaching over 20 feet in length.

HOLLYWOOD INACCURACIES

  • The neck frill is completely fictional.
  • The venom-spitting capability has no basis in the fossil record.
  • The animal is massively scaled down; real Dilophosaurus was over 6 meters long.
SCIENTIFIC DEPICTION
Dilophosaurus

PHYSICAL DIMENSIONS

ESTIMATED LENGTH
Fossil Record7 meters
InGen Clone3 meters
ESTIMATED WEIGHT
Fossil Record400 kg
InGen Clone100 kg
Accuracy Rating
FICTIONAL