Product Code Database
Example Keywords: nokia -mobile $47-196
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Mirischia
Tag Wiki 'Mirischia'.
Tag

Mirischia is an extinct of dinosaur from the stage ( Period) of northeastern Brazil.


Discovery and naming
In 2000 and reported the find of a small dinosaur fossil present in a chalk nodule, illegally acquired by the German Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Karlsruhe from an illegal Brazilian fossil dealer who had indicated the piece had been uncovered in the Chapada do Araripe, specifically at , . In 2004 the Mirischia asymmetrica was named and described by Martill, Frey and . The generic name combines the mirus, 'wonderful', with "ischia", the Latinised plural of ἴσχιον, ischion, 'hip joint'. The specific name asymmetrica refers to the fact that in the specimen the left differs from its right counterpart.

The , SMNK 2349 PAL, has its probable provenance in the Romualdo Formation of the , dating from the . It consists of a partial articulated skeleton, largely consisting of the pelvis and incomplete hind limbs, including two posterior dorsal vertebrae, a rib, , partial ilia, pubes and ischia, partial thigh bones and the upper parts of the right and . In front of the pubes, a piece of a petrified intestine is present. The specimen represents a subadult individual.


Description
Mirischia was a small bipedal predator. Its length was in 2004 estimated at 2.1 metres. In 2010 Gregory S. Paul estimated the weight at seven kilogrammes.
(2026). 9780691137209, Princeton university press.
The holotype of Mirischia is notable for having asymmetrical . Quoting from et al. (2004): "The ischia of Mirischia are asymmetrical, that on the left being perforated by an oval foramen while that on the right has an open notch in the same position." The specimen is also unusual in that it preserves some soft tissue remains: apart from the intestine, what the describers interpreted to have been an air sac was preserved between its pubic and ischial bones in the form of a vacuity. Previous workers had suggested that non-avian theropods might — like birds — possess post-cranial , and Mirischia seems to confirm that. Another notable trait is the exceptional thinness of the bone wall of all skeletal elements.


Phylogeny
In 2004 Mirischia was assigned to the , as closely related to from the Upper of Europe and from the Lower of England. It would then be the only compsognathid known from the Americas. In 2010 Naish suggested it may have instead been a basal member of the .
(2026). 9781905723614, CFZ Press.
In 2024, Andrea Cau published a study on the phylogenetics of compsognathids that recovered Mirischia, along with four other proposed compsognathids in a polytomy within basal . This polytomy notably did not include Compsognathus proper, which would make none of these species compsognathids.

This is a simplified version of the phylogeny by Cau (2024), with Mirischia in bold.

In 2025, Qiu and colleagues argued against the monophyly of Compsognathidae and included Mirischia within Sinosauropterygidae, a family containing all compsognathid-like theropods from the Jehol Biota of China. In their comprehensive revision of and Mirischia, Delcourt et al. (2025) recovered the latter as a in different positions: as an ornithomimosaurian based on equal weight phylogenetic analyses and as an early branching maniraptoromorph based on implied weight phylogenetic analyses, forming a clade with Santanaraptor, and . Neither analytical method supports a placement of Mirischia within tyrannosauroids or compsognathids.


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
1s Time