Shringasaurus
Shringasaurus (Shreen-guh-sore-us) was a prehistoric reptile living in the Middle Triassic Period, around 240 million years ago, in what is now India. It had two large distinctive horns on its head, like the ceratopsian dinosaurs that would appear millions of years later.
Classification: Reptilia. Allokotosauria. Azendohsauridae.
Genus: Shringasaurus (“Horned Lizard”)
Species: S. indicus
Shringasaurus’s teeth would seem to indicate that it ate plants. It is unknown what it used its horns for, though it may have been for defense or display.
Shringasaurus was a heavy bodied, four-legged reptile with a relatively short, blunt head. On top of this head two horns sprouted above the brows, like those of Triceratops.
Shringasaurus was not a dinosaur, but rather a “stem-archosaur”, an early member of the group of reptiles that would grow to include dinosaurs, crocodiles, pterosaurs, and birds.
Length: 3 to 4 meters (10 to 13.1 feet)
Weight: Uncertain
Shringasaurus is known from remains of at least seven individuals, found in the Denwa Foundation in India. It was described by paleontologist Saradee Sengupta and her colleagues in 2017.
Shringasaurus may have lived in a bushy floodplain with many other Triassic reptiles, including rhynchosaurs and dicynodonts. Shringasaurus appeared at a time when there was a wide range of experimental diversity in reptiles after the Permian extinction around 250 million years ago.