Therizinosaurs (also called Segnosaurs) were theropod dinosaurs and members of the clade Therizinosauria. Therizinosaur fossils have been found in Early through Late Cretaceous deposits in Mongolia, the People's Republic of China and Western North America. Various features of the forelimbs, skull and pelvis unite them quite comfortably, both as theropods and, as Maniraptora, close relatives to birds.
Among the most striking characteristics of therizinosaurs are the enormous claws on their hands, which reached lengths of three feet and earned them the nickname "Scythe-Claw". Since the therizinosauroid Beipiaosaurus was feathered, it is likely that all the therizinosaurs were. Although they are classified as theropods, specifically maniraptors, therizinosaurs had skulls similar to those of sauropods and the shape of their teeth and jaws make it likely that they were herbivores. The unusual fact of having large claws that can easily kill but having teeth that were adapted for chewing plants would probably classify Therizinosaurs as Omnivores.
The relation between the more derived therizinosaurids and other theropods has been greatly elucidated by the find of the primitive therizinosauroid Falcarius in 2005: "Falcarius utahensis seems to represent an intermediate stage between a carnivorous and herbivorous form (and) is the missing link between predatory dinosaurs and the bizarre plant-eating therizinosaurs" BBC.
The superfamily Therizinosauroidea, established by Maleev in 1954 and defined as a clade by Clark in 2004 (as the last common ancestor of Therizinosaurus and Beipiaosaurus and all its descendants), is a sub-group consisting of those therizinosaurs that are too basal to belong to Therizinosauridae. One of the former is perhaps Falcarius, discovered in 2005. Another is, by definition, Beipiaosaurus. Zhang et al. (2001) had previously defined this clade as all dinosaurs closer to Therizinosaurus than to other coelurosaurs. This earlier definition, however, defines the same group as the pre-existing Therizinosauria, so many paleontologists, including Sereno (2005), prefer Clark's definition.
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