Bellatoripes was named in 2014 from a tracksite discovered in the
Wapiti Formation, British Columbia containing the trackways of three separate track-makers, but isolated individual prints were already known prior to this discovery, including one from the Wapiti Formation and another from
Dinosaur Provincial Park in Alberta. The trackway was first discovered by a local guide-outfitter Aaron Fredlund from two footprints in October 2011, and the rest of the track site was fully excavated by August 2012. Three distinct trackways were identified, Trackway A consisting of three footprints (the
holotype specimen), Trackway B of just one, and Trackway C with two prints. The track types were assigned to a new
ichnogenus and
ichnospecies,
Bellatoripes fredlundi, named after Fredlund for his discovery. The closest comparable ichnogenus to
Bellatoripes in shape is
Tyrannosauripus, a single track from the younger late Maastrichtian of
New Mexico attributed to
Tyrannosaurus.
Bellatoripes is distinguished from
Tyrannosauripus by its smaller size, lack of separate soft-tissue pad impressions along its digits, and
hallux impressions that face forward (compared to the inward-facing hallux impression of
Tyrannosauripus). Nonetheless, the close similarity in soft-tissue traits between the two ichnogenera prompted McCrea and colleagues to coin the ichnofamily Tyrannosauripodidae, to which they also referred similar, unnamed prints from the
Nemegt Formation in
Mongolia. The ichnofamily was named for the presumed track-makers of these prints, theropods from the
family Tyrannosauridae.
Bellatoripes and other tyrannosauripodids share a number of unique features that distinguish them from other known large theropod footprints, including a large heel pad and thick digits that lack distinct toe pads and taper in width towards the claws.
Bellatoripes and other tyrannosauripodid tracks cannot be definitively assigned to Tyrannosauridae based on shared morphological traits alone, but the absence of other large theropods from the same geographical areas and
stratigraphic ages precludes any other identities for the trackmakers. It is possible then that the soft-tissue features of
Bellatoripes and tyrannosauripodid tracks are
synapomorphies of Tyrannosauridae as a whole. ==Description==