Eodromaeus was a relatively small dinosaur, like most
Carnian dinosaurs apart from
herrerasaurids. The animal was lightly built and had long hindlimbs, suggesting that it was well-built for running even by the standards of most early dinosaurs. Kubo & Kubo (2012) found that, among 23 sampled Triassic
archosaurs, only
Marasuchus exceeded
Eodromaeus in adaptations for
cursoriality. Paul Sereno has estimated that it could run about 32 km per hour (20 miles per hour).
Eodromaeus has been cited by Sereno as resembling a predicted
common ancestor to all dinosaurs, the "Eve" of dinosaurs. The skull was low and rectangular, about in length. It had an expansive
antorbital fenestra edged from below by a sharp ridge. The antorbital fenestra was preceded a promaxillary fenestra, an additional hole in the skull characteristic of
theropods and
Herrerasaurus. The
braincase had deep depressions on its side like many theropods, and connected to the
palate via thin and blade-like
basipterygoid processes. The cranium had a relatively low number of knife-shaped teeth (fifteen in total) which were longest in the front half of the
maxilla. There was also a row of tiny teeth on the
pterygoid bone of the palate.
Palatal teeth are very rare in dinosaurs (and true archosaurs in general), though they have also been found in
Eoraptor. The lower jaw was slender, with widely spaced teeth extending to the tip of the snout as in early theropods. The
cervicals (neck vertebrae) were significantly more elongated than those of
Eoraptor, and those near the shoulders had large pits which would have housed air sacs. The shorter but more numerous
dorsals (trunk vertebrae) were reinforced by
hyposphene-hypantrum articulations, while the caudals (tail vertebrae) were connected by elongated
prezygapophyses, as seen in other theropods. The shoulder girdle had a deep
coracoid connecting to a long and rod-shaped
scapula. The large forelimbs had closely-appressed forearm bones and strongly-developed wrist and elbow joints. The
manus (hand) had five fingers, with the second and third elongating towards their tips. In contrast, the fourth and fifth fingers were very thin and short. The
pelvis (hip) had a tall
ilium which connected to three
sacrals (hip vertebrae). It also included an elongated
ischium and
pubis, the latter of which tapers before expanding into a small pubic boot similar to that of other theropods. The hindlimb possessed several muscle scars characteristic of theropods, such as a depression on the
femur for extensor muscles, and a flange for
tibial ligaments on the
fibula. == Classification ==