A new ornithopod dinosaur, Transylvanosaurus platycephalus gen. et sp. nov. (Dinosauria:
Ornithischia), from the Upper Cretaceous of the Haeg Basin, Romania
Rhabdodontid dinosaurs were a group of medium-sized iguanodontian ornithopods from
the Late Cretaceous of Europe. The uppermost Cretaceous continental deposits from
the Haeg Basin of western Romania yielded a very rich assemblage of vertebrates including
abundant rhabdodontid remains, which have been exclusively referred to the genus Zalmoxes
thus far. Here we describe a new rhabdodontid dinosaur, Transylvanosaurus platycephalus
gen. et sp. nov., from the uppermost Cretaceous of the Haeg Basin. The holotype of
the new taxon was discovered in early-late Maastrichtian strata near Pui in the eastern
part of the basin and comprises the articulated basicranium and both frontals. Transylvanosaurus
differs from all previously reported rhabdodontids in having particularly wide and
crested frontals, elongated and straight paroccipital processes that make only a gentle
lateral curve and project mostly posterolaterally, prominent and massive prootic processes
that extend mainly anterolaterally and ventrally, wide and crest-like basal tubera
that meet the long axis of the braincase at a very flat angle, widely splayed basipterygoid
processes that extend mainly ventrolaterally and slightly anteriorly, as well as a
well-developed notch on the lateral side of the basicranium that is continuous, straight,
and inclined anteroventrally. Phylogenetic analyses employing two different datasets
consistently recovered the new taxon within the Rhabdodontidae, at the base of the
iguanodontian radiation. Based on the morphological comparisons presented herein,
we propose a particularly close relationship between Transylvanosaurus and Rhabdodon
from southern France, which in turn provides evidence for a more complex biogeographic
history of the Rhabdodontidae than previously thought.