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Ajancingenia

Ajancingenia
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous, 70 Ma
Ajancingenia yanshini skeleton.jpg
Skeletal diagram showing known elements
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Dinosauria
Order: Saurischia
Suborder: Theropoda
Family: Oviraptoridae
Subfamily: Oviraptorinae
Genus: Ajancingenia
Easter, 2013
Type species
Ingenia yanshini
Barsbold, 1981
Species

Ajancingenia yanshini
(Barsbold, 1981)

Synonyms

Ingenia yanshini Barsbold, 1981 (preoccupied)


Ajancingenia yanshini
(Barsbold, 1981)

Ingenia yanshini Barsbold, 1981 (preoccupied)

Ajancingenia is a genus of oviraptorid theropod dinosaurs, with one known species, Ajancingenia yanshini. Fossils have been found in several Late Cretaceous-age formations (approximately 70 million years ago) of Mongolia, most prominently in the Khermin Tsav beds of the Barun Goyot Formation. Ajancingenia is known from several specimens, which include the arms, legs, pelvis, shoulder girdle, and partial skull, and a few vertebrae. Some material referred to as Ajancingenia comes from younger formations, but the identification of some of these specimens is questionable.

Ajancingenia was first described and named by Rinchen Barsbold in 1981 and the type species is Ingenia yanshini. The name "Ingenia" derives from the Ingen Khoboor Depression of Bayankhongor Province, Mongolia, from whence it was collected, while the specific name yanshini was chosen in honour of academician Aleksandr Leonidovich Yanshin (1911–1999), who was adviser and mentor to Rinchen Barsbold during his time at the Paleontological Institute in St. Petersburg, Russia.

The generic name Ingenia was preoccupied by the generic name of Ingenia mirabilis Gerlach, 1957, a tripyloidid nematode. Thus, an alternative generic name, Ajancingenia, was proposed by Jesse Easter in 2013. The replacement generic name is derived also from ajanc (аянч) a traveler in Mongolian, as a Western allusion of sticking one’s thumb out for hitchhiking, in reference to the first manual ungual of Ajancingenia which is twice as large as the second.


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