Cope's initial discoveries Monoclonius was Edward Drinker Cope's third named ceratopsian, after
Agathaumas and
Polyonax. Several fossils were found by Cope, assisted by a young
Charles Hazelius Sternberg, in the summer of 1876 near the
Judith River in
Chouteau County, Montana, only about a hundred miles (some 150 km) from the site of the
Battle of the Little Bighorn, fought that June. The finds did not represent a single, let alone articulated, skeleton, but came from different locations. Together they included elements of most parts of the animal (only the feet were entirely missing), including the base part of a long nasal horn, part of the skull frill, brow horns, three fused cervical vertebrae, a sacrum, a shoulder girdle, an ilium, an ischium, two thighbones, a shinbone, a fibula and parts of a forelimb. Just two weeks after leaving Montana, Cope hastily described and named these finds on 30 October 1876 as the
type species Monoclonius crassus. The
specific name means "the fat one" in
Latin. Since the ceratopsians had not been recognised yet as a distinctive group, Cope was uncertain about much of the fossil material, not recognizing the nasal horn core, nor the brow horns, as part of a fossil horn. The skull frill he interpreted as an
episternum, an ossified part of the breastbone, and the fused cervicals he assumed to be anterior dorsals. Contrary to what was stated in most popular or technical science publications prior to 1992, the name
Monoclonius does not mean "single horn" or refer to its distinctive single nasal horn. In fact, the genus was named before it was known to have been a horned dinosaur, and had previously been considered a "hadrosaur". The name in fact means "single sprout", from Greek μόνος,
monos, "single", and κλωνίον,
klonion, "sprout", in reference to the way its teeth grew compared to its relative
Diclonius ("double sprout"), which was named by
Edward Drinker Cope in the same paper as
Monoclonius. In
Diclonius, Cope interpreted the fossils to show two series of teeth in use at one time (one mature set and one sprouting replacement set), while in
Monoclonius, there appeared to be only one set of teeth in use as a chewing surface at any one time, with replacement teeth growing in only after mature teeth had fallen out. This salient feature of the tooth, which specimen is now lost, almost certainly precludes it from being centrosaurine: it probably indeed is hadrosaurian and was by mistake associated with the rest of the type material. After
Othniel Charles Marsh's description of
Triceratops in 1889, Cope reexamined his
Monoclonius specimen and realized that
Triceratops,
Monoclonius, and
Agathaumas represented a group of similar dinosaurs. In the same year he redescribed
Monoclonius as having a large nasal horn and two smaller horns over the eyes and a large
frill, of which the parietal bone had been found with broad openings. In the same paper in which Cope examined
M. crassus, he also named three more
Monoclonius species. The first was
Monoclonius recurvicornis, meaning "with a recurved horn", based on specimen AMNH 3999, a short curved nasal horncore and two brow horns, that he had already reported in 1877 but not associated with
M. crassus. The second was
Monoclonius sphenocerus, the "wedge-horned" from Greek σΦηνός,
sphènos, "wedge", based on specimen AMNH 3989, a long nasal horn, found by Sternberg in 1876 on
Cow Island in the
Missouri. The third species was
Monoclonius fissus, "the split one", based on specimen AMNH 3988, a
pterygoid that Cope assumed to be a split
squamosal. In 1895, for financial reasons, Cope was forced to sell a large part of his collection to the
American Museum of Natural History. This included his
Monoclonius specimens that thus received AMNH inventory numbers. The
M. crassus fossils were catalogued as AMNH 3998. Although
John Bell Hatcher had been one of Marsh's workers and therefore in the '
Yale Camp' of the
Bone Wars, the rivalry between Cope and Marsh, after the death of both he was invited to complete Marsh's monograph on the
Ceratopsia also using Cope's material. Hatcher was very critical of Cope's collecting methods. Cope rarely identified specimens in the field with precise locations and often ended up describing
composites, rather than single individuals. Hatcher reexamined the presumed
type specimen of
M. crassus and concluded it in fact represented several individual animals and thus was a series of
syntypes. Therefore, he selected one of these as the
lectotype, the name-bearing fossil, and chose the distinctive left parietal, forming the dorsal part of the neck frill. The several
squamosals, sides of the frill, in the collection could not be associated to this lectotype and he did not believe that Cope's orbital horn (catalogued under a different number) belonged to it. This analysis was eventually, after Hatcher had deceased also, published by
Richard Swann Lull in 1907.
Centrosaurus is named or Styracosaurus'') In the years after Cope's 1889 paper, it appears that there was a tendency to describe any ceratopsid material from the Judith River beds as
Monoclonius. The first dinosaur species described from Canada were ceratopsians, in 1902 by
Lawrence Lambe, including three new species of
Monoclonius based on fragmentary skulls. Two of these,
Monoclonius belli and
Monoclonius canadensis, were later seen as two species within separate genera:
Chasmosaurus belli and
Eoceratops canadensis. The third,
Monoclonius dawsoni, of which the epithet honoured
George Mercer Dawson, was based on a partial skull, specimen NMC 1173. To this species a parietal was referred, specimen NMC 971. However, in 1904, Lambe decided that this parietal represented a different species and genus that he named
Centrosaurus apertus. With newer specimens collected by Charles H. Sternberg, it became accepted that
Centrosaurus was distinctly separate from
Monoclonius, at least by Lambe. This was challenged in a 1914 paper by
Barnum Brown who reviewed
Monoclonius and
Centrosaurus, dismissing most of Cope's species, leaving only
M. crassus. Comparing the parietals of
Monoclonius and
Centrosaurus, he concluded that any differences were caused by the fact that the
M. crassus lectotype had been that of an old animal and damaged by erosion. This would mean that the two were synonymous, with the name
Monoclonius having priority. In the same paper he named another species:
Monoclonius flexus, "the curved one", based on specimen AMNH 5239, a skull found in 1912 and featuring a forward curving nasal horn. In 1915, Lambe answered Brown in another paper — the review of the Ceratopsia in which Lambe established three families — transferring
M. dawsoni to
Brachyceratops and
M. sphenocerus to
Styracosaurus. This left
M. crassus, which he considered non-diagnostic, largely due to its damage and the lack of a nasal horn. Lambe ended the paper by referring Brown's
M. flexus to
Centrosaurus apertus, the type species of
Centrosaurus. The next round fell in 1917 to Brown in a paper on Albertan centrosaurines, which, for the first time, analyzed a complete ceratopsian skeleton, specimen AMNH 5351 found by him in 1914, which he named
Monoclonius nasicornus ("with the nose-horn"). In the same paper he described yet another species,
Monoclonius cutleri, the epithet honouring
William Edmund Cutler, based on specimen AMNH 5427, a headless skeleton featuring skin impressions. The matter bounced back and forth, over the next few years, until R.S. Lull published his "Revision of the Ceratopsia", in 1933. Although, unlike the 1907 monograph, it has relatively few illustrations, it attempted to identify and locate all ceratopsian specimens then known. Lull described another almost complete specimen from Alberta: AMNH 5341, presently exhibited as YPM 2015 at Yale's Peabody Museum in an unusual way: the left half shows the skeleton, but the right side is a reconstruction of the living animal, and referred it to a
Monoclonius (Centrosaurus) flexus. Lull had decided that
Centrosaurus was a junior synonym of
Monoclonius, but distinct enough to deserve subgeneric rank; he therefore also created a
Monoclonius (Centrosaurus) apertus.
Charles Mortram Sternberg, son of Charles H. Sternberg, in 1938 firmly established the existence of
Monoclonius-type forms in Alberta — no further specimens had come from Montana since 1876 — and claimed that differences justified the separation of the two genera.
Monoclonius-types were rarer and found in earlier horizons than
Centrosaurus-types, seemingly indicating that the one would be ancestral to the other. In 1940 C.M. Sternberg named another species:
Monoclonius lowei. The specific name honoured his field assistant
Harold D'acre Robinson Lowe from
Drumheller who had worked six field seasons, during the 1925-1937 period, with him across southern Alberta, with other work in
Manitoba and
Saskatchewan. He created yet another combination in 1949, renaming
Brachyceratops montanensis into
Monoclonius montanensis, a change today no longer accepted. In 1964
Oskar Kuhn renamed
Centrosaurus longirostris into
Monoclonius longirostris. In 1987
Guy Leahy renamed
Styracosaurus albertensis into
Monoclonius albertensis; in 1990
Thomas Lehman renamed
Avaceratops lammersi into
Monoclonius lammersi. Both names have found no acceptance. ==Classification==