Gobihadros is a genus of basal hadrosauroid dinosaur that lived in Asia during the Late Cretaceous period in what is now the Bayan Shireh Formation (Cenomanian-Santonian). It contains only the type species Gobihadros mongoliensis. It has an estimated length of .
In 2019, the type species Gobihadros mongoliensis was named and described by Khishigjav Tsogtbaatar, David Bruce Weishampel, David Christopher Evans, and Mahito Watabe. The generic name combines references to the Gobi Desert and the Hadrosauroidea. The specific name refers to the provenance from Mongolia. Because the describing article appeared in an electronic publication, Life Science Identifiers were needed to make the name valid. These were 38EE8AD7-AD50-44BF-B31D-B2675456556A for the genus and 2DB42EE7-6A64-4D64-AA19-E5D3453BF99C for the species.
The holotype, MPC-D100/746, was found in a layer of the Bayan Shireh Formation dating from the Cenomanian-Santonian stages. It consists of a nearly complete skeleton with a skull. While the postcranial skeleton was articulated, the skull was partly disintegrated. Numerous specimens have been referred to the species, the most important among them specimen MPC-D100/763, a complete articulated skull, with a hand. The specimens have partly been found in other sites in Mongolia. Combined, they make Gobihadros the most completely known basal hadrosauroid from Asia.
The describing authors indicated some distinguishing traits. Gobihadros differs from all known other non-hadrosaurid hadrosauroids in possessing a double-layered tomial edge of the premaxilla and the presence of as much as three teeth per tooth position in the lower jaw. These are typical hadrosaurid traits and were concluded to have been acquired separately by the Hadrosauridae in a process of parallel evolution. Gobihadros differs from Bactrosaurus johnsoni, Probactrosaurus gobiensis, Eolambia, Claosaurus agilis and Tethyshadros insularis by an undulating upper profile of the ilium and a more sidewards projecting supra-acetabular crest. Gobihadros differs from T. insularis, Plesiohadros djadokhtaensis and the Hadrosauridae in possessing a conical spike-like claw of the first finger.
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