Polyonax (meaning "master over many") is a genus of ceratopsid dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous (late Maastrichtian) Denver Formation of Colorado, United States. Founded upon poor remains, it is today regarded as a dubious name.
Polyonax (meaning "master over many") is a genus of ceratopsid dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous (late Maastrichtian) Denver Formation of Colorado, United States. Founded upon poor remains, it is today regarded as a dubious name.
==History== During an 1873 trip through the western US, paleontologist and naturalist Edward Drinker Cope collected some fragmentary dinosaurian material which he soon named as a new genus. Catalogued today as AMNH FR 3950, the type material included three dorsal vertebrae, limb bone material, and what are now known to be horn cores, from a subadult individual. Although it was briefly mixed up with hadrosaurs, and even considered to be a possible synonym of Trachodon, it was recognized as a horned dinosaur in time for the first monograph on horned dinosaurs (1907), wherein it was regarded as based on indeterminate material. Today, the name is used as little more than a historical curiosity, as it dates from a time before horned dinosaurs were known to exist. The most recent review listed it as an indeterminate ceratopsid.
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