Official state symbol California State Dinosaur Adopted 2017

California State Dinosaur: Augustynolophus morrisi

Augustynolophus morrisi

Augustynolophus morrisi

Augustynolophus morrisi

Official State Dinosaur of California

Legal Reference: California Senate Bill 1540 (2016), effective January 1, 2017
Artsiom Dusau Reviewed by Artsiom Dusau
Overview

State Dinosaur of California

Augustynolophus morrisi became California's official state dinosaur in 2017. This rare duck-billed dinosaur lived in the Late Cretaceous and is known from Moreno Formation fossils in the San Joaquin Valley. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state dinosaurs.
Scientific name
Augustynolophus morrisi
Period
Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian), ~68–66 million years ago
Diet
Herbivore
Length
~8–9 meters
Weight
~3,000–4,000 kg (estimated)
Discovered in
1939
Named by
Prieto-Márquez, Erickson & Novas, 2014
Fossil sites
Moreno Formation, Fresno and Merced Counties, California
Legislation
California Senate Bill 1540 (2016), effective January 1, 2017
Adopted
2017

From Saurolophus to Augustynolophus: A 75-Year Journey to a Name

Fossil limb bones of Augustynolophus morrisi on a museum display mount
Augustynolophus was identified from California material that spent decades in collections before the genus was separated from Saurolophus in 2014.

The Moreno Formation material now assigned to Augustynolophus was originally described as Saurolophus morrisi by paleontologist William J. Morris in 1973. Saurolophus is a genus of crested hadrosaur known from Alberta and Asia — placing the California material there seemed reasonable at the time. For four decades, the California hadrosaur was known as the 'Morris species of Saurolophus.'

In 2014, Albert Prieto-Márquez, Jonathan Erickson, and Fernando Novas reanalyzed the California material alongside new phylogenetic data. Their conclusion: the Moreno Formation hadrosaur was not Saurolophus. It had a distinct combination of anatomical features not shared by the Asian or Albertan specimens, and it warranted its own genus. They named it Augustynolophus — honoring Gretchen Augustyn, whose funding to the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County had supported the research that made the reclassification possible.

The full species name encodes two separate histories: morrisi preserves credit for the 1973 description, and Augustynolophus records the financial support that brought the correction 41 years later. California didn't get a new dinosaur in 2014 — the bones had been sitting in collections since 1939. It got a corrected identity.

"Augustynolophus morrisi is distinguishable from all species of Saurolophus by an autapomorphic combination of anatomical features."
— Prieto-Márquez, Erickson & Novas (2014), Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology — the formal reclassification establishing Augustynolophus as a distinct genus

Why California Hadrosaurs Are Almost Nonexistent

During the Maastrichtian — the final 6 million years of the Cretaceous — much of California's Central Valley region was shallow ocean. The terrestrial coastal strip where land animals could live was narrow, geologically active, and under constant pressure from marine transgression, volcanism, and faulting. These conditions make West Coast terrestrial fossil preservation fundamentally different from the continental interior, where hadrosaur bonebeds in Montana and Alberta preserve hundreds of individuals.

The Moreno Formation, exposed in the hills west of the San Joaquin Valley in Fresno and Merced Counties, is a rare exception: a Late Cretaceous coastal deposit containing both marine fossils and occasional terrestrial material that washed offshore before burial. Dinosaur carcasses drifting into marine sediment rarely stay intact — saltwater, transport, and seafloor scavengers degrade bones before they can be buried. The known Augustynolophus material reflects this: cranial fragments, vertebrae, limb bones from multiple individuals, enough to establish the animal's identity but nothing like the complete articulated skeletons from inland formations.

Augustynolophus belongs to the saurolophine hadrosaurs — the same broad group as Saurolophus from Alberta and Mongolia. Whether it represents an isolated West Coast population or part of a broader Maastrichtian dispersal southward depends on material that hasn't been found. The Moreno Formation is poorly exposed and difficult to survey; what exists in collections is what scattered decades of fieldwork happened to produce.

Key Dates

Timeline

1939
1939–1940s

First Moreno Formation hadrosaur material collected in Fresno and Merced Counties; specimens deposited at the Los Angeles County Museum

1973
1973

William J. Morris describes the California material as Saurolophus morrisi — a classification that will stand for four decades

2014
2014

Prieto-Márquez, Erickson & Novas reclassify the material as a distinct genus, naming it Augustynolophus morrisi — honoring donor Gretchen Augustyn and original describer Morris

2016
2016–2017

Castaic Union School District students campaign for a California state dinosaur; Senate Bill 1540 passes, designating Augustynolophus morrisi effective January 1, 2017

How Castaic Elementary Students Got California a State Dinosaur

The legislative campaign was driven by students at Castaic Union School District, working with teachers and a local paleontologist. They identified Augustynolophus as the candidate, built the scientific case, and lobbied Senate Bill 1540 through the California legislature. The Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County — which holds the primary Augustynolophus research collection — supported the effort as institutional partner.

The choice of Augustynolophus was not a close call. It is the only formally described dinosaur species from California's nonmarine Cretaceous deposits. California has other fragmentary dinosaur material, but none with the scientific documentation that Augustynolophus has. There was no alternative candidate.

Key Figure
75

Years between first collection of Moreno Formation hadrosaur material (1939) and the 2014 reclassification that gave California its own dinosaur genus — material that sat misclassified for four of those decades

Quick Answers

What is California's state dinosaur?
California's state dinosaur is Augustynolophus morrisi. It was adopted in 2017.
What does Augustynolophus morrisi mean?
The genus honors Gretchen Augustyn, and morrisi honors paleontologist William J. Morris.
Why was it previously called Saurolophus morrisi?
It was first placed in Saurolophus, then moved to its own genus in 2014.
Who campaigned for California's state dinosaur?
Students in the Castaic Union School District led the campaign.
Why are hadrosaurs so rare in California?
Late Cretaceous California had limited land deposits and poor conditions for preserving dinosaur fossils.

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