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Before I got into the paleo-curation game, even I knew of the Stegosaurus. Those plates running along its length from head to tail make it one of the most iconic dinosaurs. Our guests are going to want to see it, so make sure you do right by this animal.

Stegosaurus is a genus of stegosaurid dinosaur in the Jurassic World Evolution series. Originating from Late Jurassic North America and Europe, it is one of the most recognizable dinosaurs due to its back plates and tail spikes.

In Evolution, three large herds of Stegosaurus are encountered during the opening stages of operations on Isla Sorna, and they subsequently become available for expedition teams on that island. In the Secrets of Dr. Wu DLC, they can be fused with a Triceratops to create the Stegoceratops hybrid.

History

Stegosaurus was first cloned by InGen in the early 1990s, and were planned to be exhibited in the original Jurassic Park on Isla Nublar. However, although InGen maintained a herd of eleven Stegosaurus on Isla Sorna, by the time of the Jurassic Park incident in 1993, they had yet to transport any to Nublar.[1]

During a mission to Sorna in 1997, a breeding herd of Stegosaurus were encountered by Dr. Ian Malcolm's group, and several were briefly captured by InGen.[2] In 2001, herds of Stegosaurus were briefly glimpsed on Isla Sorna by the survivors of a plane crash on the island.[3]

Stegosaurus were later exhibited on Isla Nublar for Masrani Global's Jurassic World theme park, where they lived alongside many other species of herbivores in the Gyrosphere Valley, Cretaceous Cruise, and the Gentle Giants Petting Zoo attractions.[4] Three years after the park was abandoned, numerous Stegosaurus were encountered on Isla Nublar, during a mission to rescue the dinosaurs from the volcanic eruption of Mount Sibo. Several Stegosaurus were successfully transported to the mainland, with at least one was sold off-screen during the auction, while the others were released into the wild of northern California alongside all the other dinosaurs.[5]

A year after the events at Lockwood Manor, a Stegosaurus was seen crossing a highway, and unintentionally forced a motorist off the road.[6]

Four years after the events at Lockwood Manor, several Stegosaurus were taken to a sanctuary created by BioSyn.[7]

Characteristics

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A Stegosaurus attacking a ranger vehicle.

Stegosaurus is a large species of stegosaurid dinosaur, in fact the largest member and namesake of the stegosaurs. With thanks to their 17 to 22 distinctive upright dorsal plates that adorn its back and the lethal spikes on its tail, Stegosaurus is one of the most famous and universally recognized dinosaurs ever to have existed, and as such a popular attraction to Jurassic World parks. Its name translates to "Roofed Lizard". These herbivores have been noted for the small brain pan in relation to their body mass. As Stegosaurus shared its habitat with many large predators including Ceratosaurus and Allosaurus, it required a method of defending itself ā€“ the long spikes on its tail allow it to lash out at attackers, although the back plates are believed to be for display when attracting a mate. The base genome of Stegosaurus is light brown, with striped plates and tail spikes.

Gameplay

Evolution

Behaviour

Stegosaurus is a herding animal but becomes territorial with each other when there are more than nine individuals, a problem encountered on the Isla Sorna map when there are several loose on the island. It is advised therefore to house them in other exhibits or sell any excess Stegosaurus. Stegosaurus can also be kept with a number of other herbivores.

Available genomes

Fossil icon Dig site Quality Number available
Stegosaurusfossilicon
Cleveland Lloyd Dinosaur Quarry ā˜…
ā˜…ā˜…
ā˜…ā˜…ā˜…
ā˜…ā˜…ā˜…ā˜…
1
4
4
4
Dinosaur National Monument ā˜…ā˜…
ā˜…ā˜…ā˜…
3
4
LourinhĆ£ Formation ā˜…
ā˜…ā˜…ā˜…
ā˜…ā˜…ā˜…ā˜…
1
4
4

Skins

Evolution 2

Behaviour

In Evolution 2, Stegosaurus are a social animal that live in moderately sized herds of their own species, as well as other herbivores.[8] While they are a social species, they do not coexist well with ceratopids, such as Triceratops, and will engage in territorial fights if housed in the same enclosure. Due to their natural defences, Stegosaurus can fight back against large predators, and are too heavily armoured for many smaller species of carnivore to hunt.[8] Stegosaurus require a large amount of low-lying foliage, as well as some forested areas in their enclosure, and may attempt to escape if their social and environmental needs are not met.[8]

Paleontology

One of the world's best-known dinosaurs, Stegosaurus was first found in 1877 by famous American paleontologist, Othniel Charles Marsh in the Morrison Formation in Colorado. Othniel Marsh was the first to classify Stegosaurus as a new genus in the Bone Wars book, after fossils were found near to the Morrison Formation. Most of the collected Stegosaurus remains have come from this region in North America as well as in Portugal. Famous for the large plates on its back and the lethal spikes on its tail, Marsh named the new genus Stegosaurus, which translates to "Roof Lizard", as Marsh first theorized that the back plates were initially believed to lay across the dinosaur's back horizontally like roof tiles as a sort of armor. It was only after several complete skeletons were found that the plates were correctly reconstructed. The plates of Stegosaurus and other North American stegosaurs such as Hesperosaurus are arranged in staggered alternating pairs, which are different than the stegosaurs with straight pairs of plates such as Kentrosaurus and Chungkingosaurus. There are three different species in the genus of Stegosaurus: they are S. stenops, S. ungulatus and S. sulcatus.

Jurassic World Evolution Screenshot 2019.06.22 - 14.05.50

A pair of Stegosaurus.

The spinal plates of Stegosaurus have long been a point of discussion. Being too fragile for defense, they were more likely used for display or make the animal appear larger and more frightening to predators as well as possible attract potential mates. In addition to the 17 to 22 plates on its back, Stegosaurus also had four "thagomizers" (named in honor of a 1982 The Far Side comic) on the end of its tail, which would've been used as a potent weapon against predators like Allosaurus and Ceratosaurus, as demonstrated by an Allosaurus vertebra described with a large hole perfectly fitting the shape of a Stegosaurus thagomizer. Some Stegosaurus skeletons had six to eight spikes instead, possibly as a birth defect or by genetic chance or a combination of both.

Some scientists believe that the back legs of Stegosaurus were designed for rearing up to reach the tops of trees. Trackways show that the animal likely traveled in multi-age herds for protection. The Jurassic Franchise Stegosaurus is longer than its real life counterpart, which measured around 7.6 m (25 ft) in length, but is lighter in weight ā€“ 3 t (6,613 lb) as opposed to 5 t (11,023 lb). Additionally, since it was first discovered, Stegosaurus has throughout history often been depicted as having battled Tyrannosaurus in many media, which never would have happened because the two dinosaurs (having been separated by 60 to 80 million years) never would have met in real life, despite inhabiting the same continent of North America.

Paleoecology

Stegosaurus lived in what is now North America and Portugal during the Late Jurassic period, around 155ā€“145 million years ago, in semiarid environments with distinct wet and dry seasons upon flat floodplains. It roamed the vast, dry plains where conifers formed river-lining forests, in search of low-lying vegetation such as ginkgoes, cycads, trees, ferns, plants, and sparse Araucaria trees. It coexisted with many other notable genera of dinosaurs such as the fearsome Allosaurus as well as Apatosaurus, Brachiosaurus, Camarasaurus, Ceratosaurus, Diplodocus, and Dryosaurus.

Behind the scenes

The Stegosaurus was created using the 3D model that was created for the Jurassic World films by Industrial Light & Magic, as well as audio files provided by Universal Pictures to create the most authentic representation of the dinosaur.[9] It was first revealed in the announcement trailer that was released at Gamescom 2017.[10] It received a Species Profile on February 9, 2018.[11]

During the trailers leading up to release, Stegosaurus was seen with a low-hanging tail similar to old-fashioned portraits, as well as Jurassic World.[12][13] In response to community feedback, the development team revisited the model prior to release and included an elevated tail, similar to both its real-life counterpart and its appearance in the earlier Jurassic Park films.

In 2019, from January 24th to January 31st, a community event was held where the community was required to cumulatively release 25,000 individual Stegosaurus.[14] This goal was exceeded by ten-fold, as the total came out to 295,514. As a result, a new vivid skin could now be applied to Stegosaurus for all players following Update 1.6.2.[15]

For the Return to Jurassic Park expansion pack, Stegosaurus was given a complete overhaul with a brand new model that is based on its depiction in 1997's The Lost World: Jurassic Park, and six additional cosmetic skins.

Gallery

Evolution Database images
Stegothumb
StegoJPthumb

References

  1. ā†‘ What Killed the Gene Guard Act?. (February 23, 2018). Dinosaur Protection Group. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
  2. ā†‘ Spielberg, Steven. (Director). (1997). The Lost World: Jurassic Park [Film]. Universal Pictures.
  3. ā†‘ Johnston, Joe. (Director). (2001). Jurassic Park III [Film]. Universal Pictures.
  4. ā†‘ Trevorrow, Colin. (Director). (2015). Jurassic World [Film]. Universal Pictures.
  5. ā†‘ Bayona, J. A. (Director). (2018). Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom [Film]. Universal Pictures.
  6. ā†‘ Trevorrow, Colin. (Director). (2019). Battle at Big Rock [Short film]. Universal Pictures.
  7. ā†‘ Trevorrow, Colin. (Director). (2022). Jurassic World Dominion [Film]. Universal Pictures.
  8. ā†‘ 8.0 8.1 8.2 Vaaler, J. E. [Jens Erik]. (July 14, 2021). Species Field Guide - Stegosaurus [Online forum post]. Frontier Forums. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
  9. ā†‘ Krupa, Daniel (May 16, 2018). HOW JURASSIC WORLD EVOLUTION MADE ITS T.REX - IGN FIRST IGN. Retrieved June 14, 2018
  10. ā†‘ PlayStation Europe. (August 21, 2017). Jurassic World Evolution | Announcement Trailer | PS4 [Video]. YouTube. Retrieved October 26, 2019.
  11. ā†‘ Frontier Developments. (February 9, 2018). Species Profile - Stegosaurus [Video]. YouTube. Retrieved October 26, 2019.
  12. ā†‘ Frontier Developments. (October 9, 2017). Jurassic World Content Reveal [Video]. YouTube. Retrieved October 26, 2019.
  13. ā†‘ Frontier Developments. (October 8, 2017). First In-Game Footage - Jurassic World Evolution [Video]. YouTube. Retrieved October 26, 2019.
  14. ā†‘ JW Evolution [@JW_Evolution]. (January 24, 2019). It's our 25th anniversary this month here at @FrontierDev and we want to celebrate it with you! [Tweet]. Twitter.
  15. ā†‘ Crowther, Paul [Paul_Crowther]. (January 31, 2019). Update 1.6.2 and Vivid Stegosaurus Skin [Online forum post]. Frontier Forums. Retrieved March 20, 2021.

External links

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