The first remains of
Anchiceratops were discovered along the
Red Deer River in the
Canadian province of
Alberta in 1912 by an expedition led by Barnum Brown. but this species is widely considered a
junior synonym of
A. ornatus today.
Anchiceratops was described and named by
American paleontologist Barnum Brown, in
1914, as he believed that this dinosaur represented a transitional form closely related to both
Monoclonius and
Triceratops and intermediate between them, but closest in the development of the skull frill to the latter, hence the generic name meaning "near
Ceratops". The
type and only valid
species known today is
Anchiceratops ornatus, whose name refers to the ornate margin of its frill. Another specimen, NMC 8547 (or CMN 8547) collected by Sternberg in 1925, lacks most of the skull but is otherwise the most complete skeleton known from any ceratopsid, preserving a complete
spinal column down to the last tail
vertebra. Sternberg's material is now housed in the
Canadian Museum of Nature in
Ottawa. NMC 8547 is displayed as a half-mount with the better preserved right side showing, and completed with a cast skull replica of NMC 8535. Other material has been found since, including one or two possible
bonebed deposits in Alberta, but very little
Anchiceratops material has been described. Most
Anchiceratops fossils have been discovered in the
Horseshoe Canyon Formation of Alberta, which belongs to the later part of the
Campanian stage of the
Late Cretaceous Period (
Anchiceratops remains are known from the lower part of the formation, and range in age between 72.5 and 71 million years ago). Frill fragments found in the early Maastrichtian
Almond Formation of
Wyoming in the United States resemble
Anchiceratops. However, brown horn fragments (specimens NMC 9590 and 10645) and frill pieces (specimens NMC 9813, 9814 and 9829) have been found from two localities in the older
Oldman and
Dinosaur Park Formations (late
Campanian, 76.5-75 million years ago) with the characteristic pattern of points seen in
Anchiceratops frills. These may represent early records of
A. ornatus or possibly a second, related species.
Anchiceratops remains were also recovered in terrestrial sediments from the
St. Mary River Formation at the Scabby Butte locality in southwestern Alberta, however, the fossils cannot be referred to a specific species. 1983.001.0001 (original, not cast). In 2012, Mallon concluded that many more
Anchiceratops fossils had been collected than previously had been realized. These included the specimens TMP 1983.001.0001, a nearly complete skull of a juvenile; UW 2419, a nearly complete skull; ROM 802, a skull lacking the snout; FMNH P15003, the upper side of a skull lacking the snout; CMN 11838, a left skull frill; CMN 12–1915, frill fragments; and UALVP 1618, the rear edge of a frill. This larger number of fossils can be examined by
statistical analysis to solve certain long-standing controversies about the genus. ==Description==