Pegomastax Pegomastax

"strong jaw"

You 1.8 m (5.9 ft) tall
Pegomastax 5 m (16.4 ft) long
3 people holding hands
Length
5 m (16.4 ft)
Period
Early Jurassic (201–174 Mya)
Place
South America · Africa · South Africa
Food
Herbivore
Clade
Heterodontosauridae

Pegomastax is a genus of heterodontosaurid dinosaur that lived during the Early Jurassic of South Africa. The only known specimen was discovered in a 1966–1967 expedition in Transkei District of Cape Province, but was not described until 2012 when Paul Sereno named it as the new taxon Pegomastax africana. The genus name is derived from the Greek for “strong jaw”, and the species name describes the provenance of Africa; it was originally spelled africanus, was corrected to africana to align with the gender of the genus name.

The only known material of Pegomastax included a partial skull with well-preserved lower jaw and teeth, showing affinities for Heterodontosaurus and the group with a deep jaw, mobile , and a large canine tooth at the front of the snout.

What we know

  • Named by Sereno, 2012.
  • Fossils found in South America and Africa.