Canada is home to some of the richest deposits of dinosaur fossils in the world (see also Dinosaurs and Canada). The vast majority of the dinosaurs discovered in Canada are from Alberta, where the rising Rocky Mountains at the end of the Cretaceous period and a network of ancient rivers provided the sediment necessary for burying and preserving their remains. The names of many of the 88 dinosaurs listed below pay homage to the province, including Albertosaurus sarcophagus, Edmontosaurus regalis and Ornithomimus edmontonicus. Others honour prominent people in Canadian paleontology, for example, Lambeosaurus for Lawrence Lambe, a paleontologist active at the turn of the 20th century, Epichirostenotes curriei for Philip Currie, a paleontologist and the founder of the Royal Tyrrell Museum and Borealopelta markmitchelli for Mark Mitchell, an RTM technician who spent 7,000 hours removing rock from the fossil.
Key Terms and Methodology
The Canadian Encyclopedia’s list of dinosaur species found in Canada is grouped first by order (either saurischian or ornithischian), then by family, then by species. Saurischian dinosaurs are lizard-hipped dinosaurs, meaning that their pubis, one of three hip bones, is pointing forward as in lizards and crocodiles. Ornithischian dinosaurs are bird-hipped dinosaurs, meaning that their pubis is predominantly oriented backward, as in birds.
Dinosaurs include avian and non-avian species. Birds are dinosaurs the same way that humans are mammals; that’s why paleontologists often call birds “avian dinosaurs.” All non-avian dinosaurs (i.e., all dinosaurs except birds) went extinct 66 million years ago. While fossil birds have been found in Canada, they are not well understood because their fossils are very rare, not well preserved, and generally incomplete. This is because bird bones are small, hollow and fragile, so they tend to be destroyed before being buried and fossilized or before being discovered by paleontologists. Bird skeletons often need to be buried in special conditions, such as in a calm lake setting with abundant sediment flowing into it, in order to become fossilized. For this reason, the fossils of avian dinosaurs in Canada are usually too incomplete be named, so they have been excluded from the list below.
The list is also limited to dinosaurs known from bones and skeletons that have been formally described at a species level in a scientific publication. While dinosaur remains have been discovered in provinces and territories in addition to those listed below (namely in Nova Scotia, Nunavut, the Northwest Territories and Yukon), the fossils from these places are often not complete enough to identify to which species they belonged or have not yet been the subject of detailed scientific study. In the case of Nova Scotia, paleontologists have found fossils of a primitive armoured dinosaur, sometimes called Scutellosaurus, and of a long-necked, planting-eating dinosaur, informally called Fendusaurus eldoni. However, since neither has been described in a scientific publication, both are excluded from the list.
Dinosaur footprints often receive scientific names (called an ichnospecies), but paleontologists can’t say exactly (and with certainty) what dinosaur species made them. For example, many dinosaur footprints have been found in British Columbia and Nova Scotia, but the identity of the track-makers can only be known in general terms (e.g., long-necked sauropods, armored dinosaurs, duckbilled dinosaurs, small/medium/large meat-eating dinosaurs). The same is true for dinosaur eggs. Because dinosaur eggs vary greatly in size, shape and eggshell structure, paleontologists give each egg type a scientific name (called an oospecies). However, it is impossible to know the identity of the dinosaur that produced the eggs unless the remains of embryos or of a parent are found with them. For example, several types of dinosaur eggs and eggshells have been found in Alberta, but only one type has been associated with embryos ( Hypacrosaurus stebingeri). All other eggs can only be identified in general terms (e.g., duckbilled dinosaurs, small theropods). For these reasons, neither footprints nor eggs are included in the list below.
Ornithischian Dinosaurs
Family: Thescelosauridae (small, two-legged, herbivorous dinosaurs)
Species Name |
Province Found |
Albertadromeus syntarsus |
Alberta |
Parksosaurus warreni |
Alberta |
Thescelosaurus assiniboiensis |
Saskatchewan |
Thescelosaurus neglectus |
Alberta |
Family: Hadrosauridae (duckbilled dinosaurs)
Species Name |
Province Found |
Brachylophosaurus canadensis |
Alberta |
Corythosaurus casuarius |
Alberta |
Corythosaurus intermedius |
Alberta |
Alberta, Saskatchewan |
|
Alberta |
|
Gryposaurus notabilis |
Alberta |
Hypacrosaurus altispinus |
Alberta |
Hypacrosaurus stebingeri |
Alberta |
Alberta |
|
Alberta |
|
Alberta |
|
Parasaurolophus walkeri |
Alberta |
Prosaurolophus maximus |
Alberta |
Saurolophus osborni |
Alberta |
Family: Ankylosauridae (ankylosaurs with tail clubs)
Species Name |
Province Found |
Ankylosaurus magniventris |
Alberta |
Anodontosaurus lambei |
Alberta |
Dyoplosaurus acutosquameus |
Alberta |
Euoplocephalus tutus |
Alberta |
Scolosaurus cutleri |
Alberta |
Family: Nodosauridae (ankylosaurs with shoulder spikes and no tail club)
Species Name |
Province Found |
Alberta |
|
Edmontonia longiceps |
Alberta |
Edmontonia rugosidens |
Alberta |
Panoplosaurus mirus |
Alberta |
Family: Pachycephalosauridae (dome-headed dinosaurs)
Species Names |
Province Found |
Acrotholus audeti |
Alberta |
Colepiocephale lambei |
Alberta |
Foraminacephale brevis |
Alberta |
Gravitholus albertae |
Alberta |
Hanssuesia sternbergi |
Alberta |
Pachycephalosaurus wyomingensis |
Alberta |
Sphaerotholus buchholtzae |
Saskatchewan |
Sphaerotholus edmontonensis |
Alberta |
Stegoceras validum |
Alberta |
Family: Leptoceratopsidae (small, horned dinosaurs)
Species Name |
Province Found |
Ferrisaurus sustutensis |
British Columbia |
Gryphoceratops morrisoni |
Alberta |
Leptoceratops gracilis |
Alberta |
Montanoceratops cerorhynchos |
Alberta |
Unescoceratops koppelhusae |
Alberta |
Family: Ceratopsidae (large, horned dinosaurs)
Species Name |
Province Found |
Albertaceratops nesmoi |
Alberta |
Anchiceratops ornatus |
Alberta |
Arrhinoceratops brachyops |
Alberta |
Alberta, Saskatchewan |
|
Chasmosaurus belli |
Alberta |
Chasmosaurus russelli |
Alberta |
Coronosaurus brinkmani |
Alberta |
Eotriceratops xerinsularis |
Alberta |
Mercuriceratops gemini |
Alberta |
Pachyrhinosaurus canadensis |
Alberta |
Pachyrhinosaurus lakustai |
Alberta |
Regaliceratops peterhewsi |
Alberta |
Spinops sternbergorum |
Alberta |
Styracosaurus albertensis |
Alberta |
Torosaurus latus |
Alberta, Saskatchewan |
Saskatchewan |
|
Alberta |
|
Vagaceratops irvinensis |
Alberta |
Wendiceratops pinhornensis |
Alberta |
Xenoceratops foremostensis |
Alberta |
Saurischian Dinosaurs
Family: Ornithomimidae (dinosaurs that looked like ostriches)
Species Name |
Province Found |
Dromiceiomimus brevitertius |
Alberta |
Alberta |
|
Rativates evadens |
Alberta |
Struthiomimus altus |
Alberta |
Struthiomimus sedens |
Saskatchewan |
Family: Caenagnathidae (dinosaurs that looked like cassowaries)
Species Name |
Province Found |
Apatoraptor pennatus |
Alberta |
Caenagnathus collinsi |
Alberta |
Chirostenotes pergracilis |
Alberta |
Citipes elegans |
Alberta |
Epichirostenotes curriei |
Alberta |
Family: Alvarezsauridae (small, one-fingered, insectivorous dinosaurs)
Species Name |
Province Found |
Albertonykus borealis |
Alberta |
Family: Troodontidae (small, sickle-clawed, omnivorous dinosaurs)
Species Name |
Province Found |
Albertavenator curriei |
Alberta |
Latenivenatrix mcmasterae |
Alberta |
Stenonychosaurus inequalis |
Alberta |
Family: Dromaeosauridae (“raptors”)
Species Name |
Province Found |
Atrociraptor marshalli |
Alberta |
Boreonykus certekorum |
Alberta |
Dromaeosaurus albertensis |
Alberta |
Hesperonychus elizabethae |
Alberta |
Alberta |
Family: Tyrannosauridae (tyrannosaurs)
Species Name |
Province Found |
Alberta |
|
Daspletosaurus torosus |
Alberta |
Gorgosaurus libratus |
Alberta |
Alberta |
|
Tyrannosaurus rex |
Alberta, Saskatchewan |
Other theropods (two-legged, carnivorous dinosaurs)
Species Name |
Province Found |
Paronychodon lacustris |
Alberta |
Richardoestesia gilmorei |
Alberta |
Richardoestesia isosceles |
Alberta |