Vectidromeus
- Total Dino
- Aug 3, 2024
- 3 min read
Updated: Aug 22
MEANING: Isle of Wight runner
PERIOD: Early Cretaceous
CONTINENT: Europe
Vectidromeus is a basal ornithopod dinosaur from the Early Cretaceous of what is now England. It was a small, nimble, bipedal herbivore, closely related to Hypsilophodon. Vectidromeus is the only other genus in the group hypsilophodontidae, but has slight differences in the hips and femur.

Abstract from paper: The Lower Cretaceous Wessex Formation of the Isle of Wight, UK, has produced a diverse dinosaurian fauna over the past 150 years. Hypsilophodontids are the most common small dinosaurs in the assemblage. Currently all hypsilophodontids are referred to Hypsilophodon foxii, originally described based on skulls and skeletons from the Hypsilophodon bed near Cowleaze Chine, in the uppermost Wessex Formation. We report a new hypsilophodontid, Vectidromeus insularis gen. et sp. nov., from exposures near Sudmoor Point, lying at the base of the exposed Wessex, ∼150 m below the Hypsilophodon beds. Associated elements of the dorsal vertebrae, pelvis, hindlimbs, and tail are preserved. The specimen represents a juvenile, but differs from adult and juvenile Hypsilophodon foxii in the short and deep posterior iliac blade, short pubic peduncle, laterally exposed brevis fossa, rectangular ischia, and large fourth trochanter. Vectidromeus adds to the diversity of dinosaurs in the Wessex Formation. With other putative hypsilophodontids now assigned to other families, the Hypsilophodontidae currently comprises just Hypsilophodon and Vectidromeus, both from the Wessex Formation of the Isle of Wight. Hypsilophodontidae appear to be endemic to the Early Cretaceous of Europe.
Vectidromeus is from the Early Cretaceous. The Cretaceous is the third and final geological period of the Mesozoic Era, with the Early Cretaceous making up roughly the first half, lasting from about 143 to 100 million years ago. The poles were ice-free, due to the relatively warm climate, and forests extended into high latitudes. The continued breakup of the continents created new coastlines and isolated landmasses, influencing the evolution of distinct dinosaur faunas.
It was a time of transition, as many groups of animals and plants began to take on more modern forms while others declined or disappeared. Pterosaurs continued to thrive, though early birds were becoming more diverse and widespread. Mammals remained small but adapted to a variety of ecological niches. In the oceans, ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs were common, and early mosasaurs began to appear.
Dinosaurs remained the dominant land animals, with groups like iguanodontians, spinosaurids, and carcharodontosaurids rising to prominence. While sauropods declined in some regions, they remained abundant in the Southern Hemisphere. The first true ceratopsians appeared, and ankylosaurs replaced stegosaurs in their niche. Dromaeosaurs and other small theropods diversified. During this time, the first flowering plants evolved, gradually changing global ecosystems by providing new food sources for herbivores.

Vectidromeus is a basal ornithopod. Ornithopoda is one of the most succesful clades of the ornithischia. While later members of the group, like the hadrosaurs, grew into large, complex herbivores with sophisticated chewing mechanisms, their more basal relatives were far more modest in scale and anatomy. These early ornithopods, often found in Jurassic and Early Cretaceous deposits, were generally bipedal, lightly built, and fast-moving. These animals had long hind limbs, stiffened tails for balance, and small, beaked skulls suited for cropping low vegetation.
Many basal ornithopods appear to have relied on speed and agility to evade predators, rather than armor or social defense. Their teeth were simple compared to the dental batteries of hadrosaurs, but they show early signs of adaptations for plant processing, such as offset jaw joints and cheek-like structures to help hold food in the mouth. Despite their relatively primitive status in the ornithopod family tree, these dinosaurs were both ecologically important and evolutionarily pivotal. Over millions of years, this lineage gave rise to a wide variety of herbivores that would eventually dominate Late Cretaceous ecosystems across the globe.













