Official state symbol Texas State Dinosaur Adopted 2009

Texas State Dinosaur: Paluxysaurus jonesi

Paluxysaurus jonesi

Paluxysaurus jonesi

Paluxysaurus jonesi

Official State Dinosaur of Texas

Legal Reference: Texas House Bill 1107 (2009)
Artsiom Dusau Reviewed by Artsiom Dusau

State Dinosaur of Texas

Paluxysaurus jonesi became Texas's official state dinosaur in 2009. It was a large Early Cretaceous sauropod named for the Paluxy River after Texas replaced the earlier Pleurocoelus designation. This profile appears in the list of U.S. state dinosaurs.
Scientific name
Paluxysaurus jonesi
Period
Early Cretaceous (Aptian–Albian), ~112–110 million years ago
Diet
Herbivore
Length
~19–20 meters (estimated)
Weight
~20,000–30,000 kg (estimated)
Discovered in
1999 (formal description material); bones collected earlier in Hood County
Named by
Peter J. Rose, 2007
Fossil sites
Twin Mountains Formation, Hood County and Tarrant County, Texas
Legislation
Texas House Bill 1107 (2009)
Adopted
2009

Why Texas Had to Change Its State Dinosaur

The original 1997 designation of Pleurocoelus as Texas's state dinosaur seemed reasonable at the time. Pleurocoelus was a genus named by Othniel Charles Marsh in 1888 from Maryland material, and the name had been broadly applied to Early Cretaceous sauropod material from Texas for much of the twentieth century. The Texas sauropod bones — found in Hood County and nearby areas in the Twin Mountains Formation — were assigned to Pleurocoelus by default, because no better name was available.

The problem was that Pleurocoelus itself was based on fragmentary Maryland material (from the Arundel Formation), and the Texas material didn't necessarily belong to the same genus as the Maryland type specimens. The name was being used as a catch-all for Early Cretaceous American sauropod material that shared some similarities but might represent multiple distinct taxa.

When Peter Rose completed a detailed analysis of the Texas material in 2007 and published a formal description, he found that it had a distinct enough combination of features to warrant its own genus name. He named it Paluxysaurus jonesi — 'Jones's lizard of the Paluxy' — honoring both the river and the Jones Ranch where significant material had been found. Two years later, Texas updated its state dinosaur designation accordingly.

"Paluxysaurus jonesi represents a new genus and species of titanosauriform sauropod from the Twin Mountains Formation of north-central Texas."
— Rose, P.J. (2007), Palaeontologia Electronica Vol. 10(1) — opening statement from the formal description

The Paluxy River: Tracks, Bones, and an Unlikely Texas Tourist Attraction

Dinosaur tracks exposed in the limestone bed of the Paluxy River
Track-bearing limestone along the Paluxy River made Glen Rose one of the best-known dinosaur footprint sites in the United States.

The Paluxy River runs through Glen Rose in Somervell County and Hood County, Texas. It is famous in paleontological circles — and increasingly in popular culture — for the dinosaur trackways exposed in its limestone bed and the adjacent banks. The tracks are Early Cretaceous in age, preserved in the Glen Rose Formation, and include both large three-toed theropod prints and the broad, rounded prints of large sauropods.

Dinosaur Valley State Park in Glen Rose preserves the most significant publicly accessible Early Cretaceous trackways in North America. The sauropod prints there — broad, rounded tracks from large animals — match what Paluxysaurus would have left: same time period, same river system, same animal type. Texas's state dinosaur is named for the river; the river's state park holds the footprints.

The sauropod tracks at Dinosaur Valley are generally attributed to large brachiosaur-type sauropods, and Paluxysaurus — as a large brachiosaurid-grade sauropod from the same time period and region — is a reasonable candidate for the trackmaker. This attribution is circumstantial: no direct skeletal association with the Glen Rose tracks exists, and other large sauropods may have been present. But the size and time period match, and Paluxysaurus's connection to the Paluxy region gives the state dinosaur a tangible geographic anchor.

The Jones Ranch bones in Hood County, the sauropod tracks at Glen Rose 40 miles south, and the theropod tracks attributed to Acrocanthosaurus at the same sites together sketch a coherent Early Cretaceous community — bones and footprints from the same world, preserved across two adjacent Texas counties. Few state dinosaur designations come with this kind of layered physical evidence still accessible in the ground.

Key Dates

Timeline

1888
1888

Othniel Charles Marsh names Pleurocoelus from Maryland material; the name is subsequently applied to Texas sauropod bones by default for over a century

1997
1997

Texas designates Pleurocoelus as its state dinosaur — the name in use at the time for the state's Early Cretaceous sauropod material

2007
2007

Peter Rose formally describes Paluxysaurus jonesi from Hood County material, recognizing the Texas sauropod as a distinct genus from Maryland's Pleurocoelus

2009
2009

Texas House Bill 1107 updates the state dinosaur designation from Pleurocoelus to Paluxysaurus jonesi — one of the few times a US state has revised an existing dinosaur symbol

A Note on Ongoing Taxonomy: Is Paluxysaurus Sauroposeidon?

Since Rose named Paluxysaurus in 2007, some researchers have proposed that Paluxysaurus and the related Oklahoma sauropod Sauroposeidon may represent the same animal — potentially making Paluxysaurus synonymous with the earlier-named Sauroposeidon. If this synonymy were formally accepted, Texas's state dinosaur name would need another update.

This question is not resolved. The anatomical comparison between Paluxysaurus and Sauroposeidon material is complicated by the fragmentary nature of both and the different elements preserved in each. Some analyses support synonymy; others maintain them as distinct. Texas's designation uses Paluxysaurus jonesi, which is the validly described species from Texas material regardless of how the Sauroposeidon question resolves. If the name changes in the literature in the future, another legislative update would be consistent with the pattern Texas has already established.

Key Figure
2

Times Texas has officially designated a state dinosaur — Pleurocoelus in 1997, updated to Paluxysaurus jonesi in 2009 when the taxonomy was corrected

Quick Answers

What is Texas's state dinosaur?
Texas's state dinosaur is Paluxysaurus jonesi. It was adopted in 2009.
Why did Texas change its state dinosaur from Pleurocoelus to Paluxysaurus?
Because later research showed the Texas fossils needed their own genus name.
What does Paluxysaurus jonesi mean?
It means 'lizard of the Paluxy,' and jonesi honors the Jones Ranch.
Did Paluxysaurus make the dinosaur tracks at Glen Rose?
Possibly. It is a reasonable match for the large sauropod tracks there.
Could Texas's state dinosaur change again?
Possibly, if future taxonomy changes the name again.
Where can I see the Glen Rose dinosaur tracks?
You can see them at Dinosaur Valley State Park in Glen Rose.

You Might Also Like