Zhongyuansaurus (meaning "Zhongyuan lizard") is an extinct genus of ankylosaurid dinosaurs known from the Early Cretaceous Haoling Formation of what is now Henan Province, China. The genus contains two species, Z. luoyangensis, named in 2007, and Z. junchangi, named in 2025, both known from a single partial skeleton. Zhongyuansaurus is similar to Gobisaurus, prompting some researchers to regard the genera as synonymous.
The generic name, Zhongyuansaurus, is derived from "Zhongyuan", after the area south of Yellow River area, and the Greek word sauros, meaning "lizard". The specific name, luoyangensis, refers to the Luoyang area where the holotype was found.
In a 2015 publication, Victoria Arbour and Phillip J. Currie determined that Zhongyuansaurus may be a junior synonym of Gobisaurus domoculus, as they recognized all the diagnosable characteristics of Gobisaurus in the Zhongyuansaurus holotype, except where these could not be assessed due to damage.
In 2025, Zhang et al. described Zhongyuansaurus junchangi as a new species in the genus based on the holotype, 41HIII0708, which comprises a right mandible, 14 free caudal vertebrae and seven fused caudal vertebrae forming the club 'handle', ten , four ribs, the left humerus, one metatarsal, and 41 osteoderms. The specific name, junchangi, honors Chinese paleontologist Lü Junchang and his work in Henan. They noted several characteristics that could be used to distinguish Zhongyuansaurus from other Asian ankylosaurids, including Gobisaurus and Shamosaurus (an ankylosaurid similar to Gobisaurus). The specimen was found in the same rock layers as Z. luoyangensis.
An arrow-shaped bone with a pointed end was found near the region of the nasal bone. Xu et al. (2007) interpreted it as a nasal horn homologous to other osteoderms that would have protruded from the nasal bone on an angle without being fused to the bone, a feature not seen in any ankylosaur. The authors suggested that the nasal horn may have been used for intraspecific and interspecific combat.
The tail club of Zhongyuansaurus only preserves the "handle" and no "knob" osteoderms. The holotype preserves the terminal caudal vertebrae, so the absence of the “knob” osteoderms is not because the distal end of the tail is missing. Although the holotype specimen represents an immature individual based on cranial sutures, ontogeny does not seem to be an explanation for the absence of the knob osteoderms. In 2015, Arbour & Currie proposed alternate explanations for the lack of knob osteoderms; if they may were present in life, they were likely small and not firmly articulated to the handle, thus becoming disarticulated after death. However, they also noted that isolated tail club knobs from ankylosaurines often preserve some fragments of the distal caudal vertebrae or ossified tendons associated with the knob osteoderms. Since the distalmost caudal vertebrae are all preserved, this may indicate the lack of knob osteoderms altogether.
A phylogenetic analysis conducted by Thompson et al. (2012) is reproduced below.
Description
Classification
Paleoenvironment
See also
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