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DVL-0080Specimen Record

Lufengosaurus

AI Reconstruction of Lufengosaurus huenei, generated in 2026

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Lufengosaurus was one of the first dinosaurs discovered in China and remains one of the best-known early sauropodomorphs from Asia. This Early Jurassic herbivore could walk on two or four legs and represents an important transitional form in the evolution toward giant sauropods.

Did you know?

Lufengosaurus was the first dinosaur to have a skeleton mounted for public display in China, unveiled in 1958

About

Lufengosaurus huenei was a robust, medium-sized that inhabited what is now Yunnan Province, China, during the Early Jurassic period. With an elongated neck, small head, and bulky body supported by powerful hindlimbs, this dinosaur displayed the classic body plan of early sauropodomorphs—the ancestors of the great long-necked giants. Its forelimbs were shorter than the hindlimbs but still substantial, allowing it to move comfortably on either two or four legs depending on the situation. The skull featured leaf-shaped teeth well-suited for cropping vegetation, and the animal likely spent much of its time browsing on ferns, cycads, and conifers in the subtropical forests of Early Jurassic China. Lufengosaurus holds immense historical significance as one of the first dinosaurs scientifically described from China, discovered in the rich fossil beds of the Lufeng Basin. The abundance of specimens—including individuals of various ages—has made it invaluable for understanding growth patterns and population dynamics in early dinosaurs. Recent studies have even detected preserved collagen proteins in Lufengosaurus rib fossils, representing some of the oldest dinosaur protein sequences ever recovered. The species was named in honor of the renowned German paleontologist Friedrich von Huene, reflecting the international collaboration that characterized early Chinese paleontology.

First described1938
Discovered byChung Chien Young
Type specimenIVPP V15, Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Beijing

Explore the anatomy

4 features
Long Neck

That stretchy neck was built for reaching! Supported by extra-long neck bones, it let Lufengosaurus munch leaves at different heights without moving its whole body. This was just the beginning of a trend — later relatives, the giant sauropods, would take neck length to absolutely wild extremes.

Direct fossil
Powerful Back Legs

Those chunky back legs were way longer than the front ones, meaning this dinosaur could comfortably walk on two feet. Studies of the leg bones show they carried most of the body weight — handy for a creature that hadn't yet committed to life on all fours like its giant descendants.

Direct fossil
Giant Thumb Claw

Check out that oversized, curved claw on each thumb! Scientists think it worked as either a defensive weapon or a handy tool for hooking branches and pulling them close. Close relatives had the same feature, hinting these early dinosaurs shared some interesting survival tricks.

Comparative anatomy
Ancient Proteins in Bone

In 2017, scientists pulled off something incredible — they found 195-million-year-old collagen (a tough protein found in bones and skin) preserved inside Lufengosaurus ribs. Tiny blood vessel channels in the bone helped protect these molecules, proving that bits of ancient life can survive for almost unimaginable stretches of time.

Direct fossil

Where Lufengosaurus huenei Roamed

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During the Early Jurassic, Lufengosaurus huenei roamed the subtropical lowlands of what is now Yunnan Province, situated on the eastern margin of the vast supercontinent Pangaea. This warm, seasonally arid basin lay far inland from the encroaching Tethys Sea, characterized by meandering rivers, floodplains dotted with conifers and ferns, and periodic drought conditions that would occasionally trap these early sauropodomorphs in drying lakebeds.

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