Nuthetes

Nu-thet-eez.
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Benjamin Gutierrez

Vertebrate Paleontologist

Benjamin Gutierrez is a leading expert on dinosaurs, particularly the mighty theropods. His fieldwork in South America has uncovered new species and provided insights into dinosaur social structures.

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Name

Nuthetes (Monitor).

Phonetic

Nu-thet-eez.

Named By

Classification

Chordata, Reptilia, Dinosauria, Saurischia, Theropoda, Dromaeosauridae, Eudromaeosauria, Velociraptorinae.

Diet

Carnivore.

Species

N. destructor

Size

Highly speculative given that this genus is in essence a tooth taxon. Comparisons to dromaeosaurid dinosaurs however indicates that the holotype came from a dinosaur roughly 2 meters in length.

Known locations

England - Lulworth Formation, Cherty Freshwater Member. Possibly France.

Time Period

Berriasian of the Cretaceous.

Fossil representation

Teeth and a fragment of jawbone.

In Depth

       Originally thought to be a juvenile of a species of Megalosaurus, Nuthetes was later established as a distinct genus. Today Nuthetes is thought to represent a possible dromaeosaurid dinosaur, but the key word here is ‘possible’. So far Nuthetes is only known from teeth and a fragment of jawbone, making such things as an exact indification very difficult. It is also hard to estbalish any further details and the only lead that paleontoligsts have is that the Nuthetes material represents a possible dromaeosaur. If true than comparisons to other dromaeosaurs indicate that Nuthetes, if a dromaeosaur, would have been about two meters long.

       There is also some confusion with the genus Dromaeosauroides from Denmark, as some larger fossil teeth that have been referred to Nuthetes may actually belong to Dromaeosauroides. Likewise, other teeth from Jurassic aged rocks may actually come from proceratosaurid dinosaurs (those related to Proceratosaurus). Overall, Nuthetes is considered to be a dubious dinosaur genus as it will be very difficult to infer further fossil remains based only upon the teeth.

Further Reading

– On some fossil reptilian and mammalian remains from the Purbecks. – Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 10:420-433. – Richard Owen – 1854. – Monograph on the fossil Reptilia of the Wealden and Purbeck formations. Supplement no. IX. Crocodilia (Goniopholis, Brachydectes, Nannosuchus, Theriosuchus, and Nuthetes). – The Palaeontographical Society 1879, 1-19. – Richard Owen – 1879. – The first record of velociraptorine dinosaurs (Saurischia, Theropoda) from the Wealden (Early Cretaceous, Barremian) of southern England. – Cretaceous Research, 25(3): 353-364. – S. C. Sweetman – 2004.

SPECIES SPOTLIGHT