Showing posts with label UK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UK. Show all posts

Thursday, January 10, 2019

[Paleontology • 2019] Descriptive Anatomy of the Largest Known Specimen of Protoichthyosaurus prostaxalis (Reptilia: Ichthyosauria) including Computed Tomography and Digital Reconstruction of A Three-dimensional Skull


Protoichthyosaurus prostaxalis Appleby, 1979

in Lomax, Porro & Larkin, 2019.  

Abstract
Ichthyosaur fossils are abundant in Lower Jurassic sediments with nine genera found in the UK. In this paper, we describe the partial skeleton of a large ichthyosaur from the Lower Jurassic (lower Sinemurian) of Warwickshire, England, which was conserved and rearticulated to form the centrepiece of a new permanent gallery at the Thinktank, Birmingham Science Museum in 2015. The unusual three-dimensional preservation of the specimen permitted computed tomography (CT) scanning of individual braincase elements as well as the entire reassembled skull. This represents one of the first times that medical imaging and three-dimensional reconstruction methods have been applied to a large skull of a marine reptile. Data from these scans provide new anatomical information, such as the presence of branching vascular canals within the premaxilla and dentary, and an undescribed dorsal (quadrate) wing of the pterygoid hidden within matrix. Scanning also revealed areas of the skull that had been modelled in wood, clay and other materials after the specimen’s initial discovery, highlighting the utility of applying advanced imaging techniques to historical specimens. Additionally, the CT data served as the basis for a new three-dimensional reconstruction of the skull, in which minor damage was repaired and the preserved bones digitally rearticulated. Thus, for the first time a digital reconstruction of the skull and mandible of a large marine reptile skull is available. Museum records show the specimen was originally identified as an example of Ichthyosaurus communis but we identify this specimen as Protoichthyosaurus prostaxalis. The specimen features a skull nearly twice as long as any previously described specimen of P. prostaxalis, representing an individual with an estimated total body length between 3.2 and 4 m.




Figure 1: Three-dimensional skull of BMT 1955.G35.1, Protoichthyosaurus prostaxalis.
 (A) Original photograph of the first skull reconstruction (left lateral view) within a couple of years of the 1955 excavation. Note that the prefrontal and postorbital are present, which we have been unable to locate in our study. (B) Skull in left lateral view, as reconstructed in 2015. (C) Skull in right lateral view, as reconstructed in 2015. Note the distinctive asymmetric maxilla with long, narrow anterior process. Teeth are not in their original positions. Scale bar represents 20 cm.



Conclusions: 
In this study, we describe a large, partial ichthyosaur skeleton from the Early Jurassic of Warwickshire, England. In addition to examining the specimen, we carried out CT scanning of individual skull bones as well as the entire, reassembled skull, one of the first times the skull of a large marine reptile has been successfully CT-scanned, visualized and reconstructed in 3D (see McGowan, 1989; Foffa et al., 2014a). CT scanning contributed greatly to our anatomical description by revealing features not visible on original fossil material such as: branching, longitudinal vascular canals within the premaxilla and dentary; short canals penetrating the nasal, lacrimal, stapes and articular; trabecular bone within the opisthotic; canals in the basisphenoid and supraoccipital; the presence of the quadrate process of the pterygoid; and the sutural morphology. We also demonstrate the utility of applying medical imaging techniques to historic specimens to differentiate between original fossil material and reconstructed regions, as well as the advantage of using digital visualization to accurately reconstruct large fossil specimens in 3D.

The detailed description of the three-dimensional skull and braincase presented herein also provides information that can be used in phylogenetic studies. Although incomplete, the skull and braincase preserve various elements that have not previously been reported or described in any specimen of Protoichthyosaurus and therefore it provides more information about this taxon so that its phylogenetic position can be explored in more detail. Furthermore, our study has found additional characters that may lend further support for the distinction of Protoichthyosaurus from its sister taxon Ichthyosaurus, such as the morphology of the pterygoid and anteroventral surface of the parietal, which differ from that described for Ichthyosaurus (McGowan, 1973). However, considering that only a couple of specimens preserve these elements, it is possible that the differences may be the result of individual variation; more three-dimensional specimens of both taxa are needed to test and clarify these findings.

Based on a unique combination of characters, we identify the studied specimen as P. prostaxalis. With a skull nearly twice as long as any previously described specimen of P. prostaxalis, this specimen greatly increases the known size range of this genus. Compared with known, contemporaneous Sinemurian ichthyosaurs, the estimated size suggests it was larger than all species of Ichthyosaurus (Lomax & Sachs, 2017), and comparable with the largest known specimens of Leptonectes tenuirostris (McGowan, 1996a), but smaller than L. solei (McGowan, 1993), Excalibosaurus costini (McGowan, 2003) and Temnodontosaurus platyodon (McGowan, 1996b). Thus, our study also provides new information on ichthyosaur diversity and potential ecology in the Early Jurassic of the UK.


Dean R. Lomax, Laura B. Porro and Nigel R. Larkin. 2019. Descriptive Anatomy of the Largest Known Specimen of Protoichthyosaurus prostaxalis (Reptilia: Ichthyosauria) including Computed Tomography and Digital Reconstruction of A Three-dimensional Skull.   PeerJ. 7:e6112. DOI:  10.7717/peerj.6112


Tuesday, November 7, 2017

[PaleoMammalogy • 2017] Durlstodon ensomi & Durlstotherium newmani • Highly Derived Eutherian Mammals from the earliest Cretaceous of southern Britain


the Purbeck lagoon at dusk with Durlstodon gen. nov. (left foreground), Durlstotherium gen. nov. (right and center foreground) and the theropod Nuthetes holding a captured Durlstotherium (centre middle distance). 

A. Durlstotherium newmani gen. et sp. nov., NHMUK PV M 99991.
B. Durlstodon ensomi gen. et sp. nov.
, NHMUK PV M 99992.

Artwork by Mark Witton. @MarkWitton 

Eutherian mammals (Placentalia and all mammals phylogenetically closer to placentals than to marsupials) comprise the vast majority of extant Mammalia. Among these there is a phenomenal range of forms and sizes, but the origins of crown group placentals are obscure. They lie within the generally tiny mammals of the Mesozoic, represented for the most part by isolated teeth and jaws, and there is strongly conflicting evidence from phenomic and molecular data as to the date of origin of both Eutheria and Placentalia. The oldest purported eutherians are Juramaia from the Upper Jurassic of China, and Eomaia and Acristatherium from the Lower Cretaceous, also of China. Based on dental characters and analyses of other morphological and molecular data, doubt has recently been cast on the eutherian affinities of the Chinese taxa and consequently on the date of emergence of Eutheria. Until now, the only tribosphenic mammal recorded from the earliest Cretaceous (Berriasian) Purbeck Group of Britain was the stem tribosphenidan Tribactonodon. Here we document two new tribosphenic mammals from the Purbeck Group, Durlstotherium gen. nov. and Durlstodon gen. nov., showing highly derived eutherian molar characters that support the early emergence of this clade, prior to the Cretaceous.

Key words: Mammalia, Eutheria, dentition, Early Cretaceous, Purbeck Group, Britain.


Fig. 5. Normal light photographs of studied specimens of eutherian mammal teeth from the Berriasian Purbeck Group of Dorset, southern England; in mesial (A1, B1), distal (A2, B2), lingual (A3, B3), and labial (A4, B4) views.
 A. Durlstotherium newmani gen. et sp. nov., NHMUK PV M 99991. B. Durlstodon ensomi gen. et sp. nov., NHMUK PV M 99992.

Systematic palaeontology
Class Mammalia Linnaeus, 1758
Subclass Tribosphenida McKenna, 1975
Infraclass Eutheria Gill, 1872
Order and Family incertae sedis

Genus Durlstotherium nov.

Type species: Durlstotherium newmani sp. nov., monotypic, see below.

Etymology: In reference to Durlston Bay, Dorset, UK, the locality from where the holotype and only specimen was obtained; and from Greek, therion, beast; a commonly used suffix in the names of mammals.; In honour of Charlie Newman, recognising his intimate local knowledge, willingly shared, and his help in the field.


Genus Durlstodon nov. 
Type species: Durlstodon ensomi sp. nov., monotypic, see below.

Etymology: In reference to Durlston Bay, Dorset, UK, the locality from where the holotype and only specimen was obtained; and from Greek, odontos, tooth.; In honour of Paul Ensom, recognising his major contribution to Purbeck palaeontology.

Fig. 7. Artist’s impression of the Purbeck lagoon at dusk with Durlstodon gen. nov. (left foreground), Durlstotherium gen. nov. (right and center foreground) and the theropod Nuthetes holding a captured Durlstotherium (centre middle distance).

Artwork by Mark Witton. @MarkWitton

Steven C. Sweetman, Grant Smith and David M. Martill. 2017. Highly Derived Eutherian Mammals from the earliest Cretaceous of southern Britain. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. in press. DOI: 10.4202/app.00408.2017


Wednesday, October 4, 2017

[Paleontology • 2017] Ieldraan melkshamensis • A New Metriorhynchid Crocodylomorph from the Oxford Clay Formation (Middle Jurassic) of England, with Implications for the Origin and Diversification of Geosaurini


Ieldraan melkshamensis 
Foffa, Young, Brusatte, Graham & Steel, 2017

Abstract
Metriorhynchids are an extinct group of Jurassic–Cretaceous crocodylomorphs secondarily adapted to a marine lifestyle. A new metriorhynchid crocodylomorph from the Oxford Clay Formation (Callovian, Middle Jurassic) of England is described. The specimen is a large, fragmentary skull and associated single ramus of a lower jaw uniquely preserved in a septarian concretion. The description of the specimen reveals a series of autapomorphies (apicobasal flutings on the middle labial surface of the tooth crowns, greatly enlarged basoccipital tuberosities) and a unique combination of characters that warrant the creation of a new genus and speciesIeldraan melkshamensis gen. et sp. nov. This taxon shares numerous characters with the Late Jurassic–Early Cretaceous genus Geosaurus: tooth crowns that have three apicobasal facets on their labial surface, subtly ornamented skull and lower jaws elements, and reception pits along the lateral margin of the dentary (maxillary overbite). Phylogenetic analysis places this new species as the sister taxon to Geosaurus. The new taxon adds valuable information on the time of origin of the macrophagous subclade Geosaurini, which was initially thought to have evolved and radiated during the Late Jurassic. The presence of Ieldraan melkshamensis, the phylogenetic re-evaluation of Suchodus durobrivensis as a Plesiosuchus sister taxon and recently identified Callovian Dakosaurus-like specimens in the Oxford Clay Formation, indicate that all major Geosaurini lineages originated earlier than previously supposed. This has major implications for the evolution of macropredation in the group. Specifically, we can now demonstrate that the four different forms of true ziphodonty observed in derived geosaurins independently evolved from a single non-functional microziphodont common ancestor.

Keywords: Ieldraan, Melksham monster, Geosaurus, Geosaurini, Jurassic, macrophagy


 Skull and left mandibular ramus of Ieldraan melkshamensis gen. et sp. nov. (NHMUK PV OR 46797).

Systematic palaeontology 
Superorder Crocodylomorpha Hay, 1930 (sensu Walker 1970) 
Suborder Thalattosuchia Fraas, 1901 (sensu Young & Andrade 2009) 
Family Metriorhynchidae Fitzinger, 1843 (sensu Young & Andrade 2009) 
Subfamily Geosaurinae Lydekker, 1889 (sensu Young & Andrade 2009) 
Tribe Geosaurini Lydekker, 1889 (sensu Cau & Fanti 2011)

 Subtribe Geosaurina subtr. nov.

 Type genus. Geosaurus Cuvier, 1824 (sensu Young et al. 2012).

 Geological range. Middle Callovian to Valanginian (34 myr duration). 
Geographical range. European endemic (UK, Germany and France). 

 Genus Ieldraan gen. nov. 
Type species. Ieldraan melkshamensis gen. et sp. nov. 

 Derivation of the name: Older One’. Ieldra, Old English for older; and an, Old English for one, referring to the stratigraphically older age of this new genus compared to its close relative Geosaurus

Ieldraan melkshamensis sp. nov.  
1888 Metriorhynchus moreli Eudes-Deslongchamps; Lydekker: 97.

Derivation of name: ‘Older One from Melksham’, epithet translated from Latin, locative case.


Conclusions:
Based on our description of a long overlooked and misinterpreted specimen (NHMUK PV OR 46797), we establish the new taxon Ieldraan melkshamensis gen. et sp. nov. Despite the poor state of preservation, we demonstrate that this late Middle Jurassic taxon from the OCF shows remarkable similarities with the Late Jurassic genus Geosaurus. Ieldraan and Geosaurus are found to be sister taxa in a new European endemic, Callovian–Valanginian geosaurin lineage that we name Geosaurina subtr. nov. The morphology and stratigraphical occurrence of Ieldraan melkshamensis, combined with our phylogenetic analysis, demonstrate that numerous adaptations linked to macrophagy had already evolved in Geosaurini by the Callovian stage. This suggests that the diversification of the tribe was perhaps less abrupt than previously thought, but rather had a longer temporal and phylogenetic fuse. We also show that the evolution of ziphodonty followed a different path than previously hypothesized. The new information presented here indicates that four different true ziphodont morphologies in the derived Late Jurassic geosaurins independently evolved from a unique non-functional microziphodont common ancestor.


 Davide Foffa, Mark T. Young, Stephen L. Brusatte, Mark R. Graham and Lorna Steel. 2017. A New Metriorhynchid Crocodylomorph from the Oxford Clay Formation (Middle Jurassic) of England, with Implications for the Origin and Diversification of Geosaurini. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology.  DOI: 10.1080/14772019.2017.1367730

  

Sunday, September 3, 2017

[Paleontology • 2017] Lemmysuchus obtusidens • Re-description of ''‘Steneosaurusobtusidens'' Andrews, 1909, An Unusual Macrophagous Teleosaurid Crocodylomorph from the Middle Jurassic of England


Lemmysuchus Steneosaurus obtusidens'' Andrews, 1909


Abstract
Teleosaurids were a clade of crocodylomorphs that attained near-global distribution during the Jurassic Period. Within Teleosauridae, one particular sub-clade of durophagous/macrophagous taxa achieved large body sizes and were apex predators in shallow marine environments during the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous in Europe and around the coast of the Tethys Seaway. Unfortunately, the origins of this clade are still poorly understood. ‘Steneosaurus’ obtusidens is a little-studied macrophagous species from the Oxford Clay Formation (Callovian, Middle Jurassic) of the UK and near Migné-les-Lourdines (Middle Callovian) in France. Despite being considered a sister taxon of the Late Jurassic taxon Machimosaurus, the taxonomy of ‘S.’ obtusidens remains unclear. Although three different synonymies have been proposed (variously a subjective synonym of other taxa), these taxonomic hypotheses have not been based on detailed anatomical comparisons and thus have not been tested. Here, we re-describe the holotype of ‘S.’ obtusidens, demonstrate that it is indeed a valid taxon, restrict the referred specimens to a fragmentary skeleton, nearly complete skull, and partial rostrum, and establish a new monotypic genus, Lemmysuchus. Our re-description reveals five autapomorphies for Lemmysuchus obtusidens and nine apomorphic characters that support the tribe Machimosaurini (Lemmysuchus Machimosaurus).

Keywords: Crocodylomorpha, LemmysuchusMachimosaurusSteneosaurus, Teleosauridae, Thalattosuchia




Michela M. Johnson, Mark T. Young, Lorna Steel, Davide Foffa, Adam S. Smith, Stéphane Hua, Philipe Havlik, Eliza A. Howlett and Gareth Dyke. 2017. Re-description of ''‘Steneosaurus’ obtusidens'' Andrews, 1909, An Unusual Macrophagous Teleosaurid Crocodylomorph from the Middle Jurassic of England. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. in press.  DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlx035 



Wednesday, August 30, 2017

[Paleontology • 2017] On the Largest Ichthyosaurus: A New Specimen of Ichthyosaurus somersetensis Containing An Embryo


Ichthyosaurus somersetensis Lomax and Massare, 2017
 (NLMH 106234) 
from the Lower Jurassic (lower Hettangian) of Doniford Bay, Watchet, Somerset, UK


A formerly undescribed Ichthyosaurus specimen from the collection of the Niedersächsisches Landesmuseum (Lower Saxony State Museum) in Hannover, Germany, provides valuable new information. The skeleton was collected from the Lower Jurassic strata (lower Hettangian, Blue Lias Formation) of Doniford Bay, Somerset, UK. However, the specimen is a composite as almost the entire tail has been added and other parts are reconstructed. Regardless of the incomplete preservation, the estimated total length of this individual, based on the skull and precaudal length, is between 300 and 330 cm and it is thus the largest unequivocal example of the genus Ichthyosaurus. Cranial and postcranial characters, specifically from the maxilla, lacrimal, jugal, the humerus, and the ilium justify a referral to I. somersetensis. A fork-like shape of the proximal end of the ilium is unusual and has not been reported for any species of Ichthyosaurus. Likewise the presence of four elements in the third row of the hindfin, indicated by the presence of a bifurcation is novel for the species and has wider implications for the taxonomic utility of hindfins within the genus. The specimen also bears an embryo, which is only the third embryo known for Ichthyosaurus and the first to be positively identified to species level.

Key words: Ichthyosauria, Ichthyosaurus somersetensis, embryo, Jurassic, Hettangian, UK, Somerset.


Artist impression of pregnant Ichthyosaurus.
ILLUSTRATION: Joschua Knüppe

Fig. 2.  Skeleton of Ichthyosaurus somersetensis Lomax and Massare, 2017 (NLMH 106234) from the Lower Jurassic (lower Hettangian) of Doniford Bay, Watchet, Somerset, UK. 


Systematic palaeontology

Order Ichthyosauria de Blainville, 1835
Family Ichthyosauridae Bonaparte, 1841
Genus Ichthyosaurus De la Beche and Conybeare, 1821
Type species: Ichthyosaurus communis De la Beche and Conybeare, 1821; upper Hettangian–lower Sinemurian, Lower Jurassic of England, UK.

Ichthyosaurus somersetensis Lomax and Massare, 2017

 .....


Dean R. Lomax and Sven Sachs. 2017.  On the Largest Ichthyosaurus: A New Specimen of Ichthyosaurus somersetensis Containing An Embryo. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. in press.  DOI: 10.4202/app.00376.2017

Largest 'Sea Dragon' Fossil Accidentally Discovered in Museum
on.natgeo.com/2wNrj9z   @NatGeo


Friday, August 18, 2017

[Paleontology • 2017] Thaumatodracon wiedenrothi • A Morphometrically and Stratigraphically Intermediate New Rhomaleosaurid Plesiosaurian from the Lower Jurassic (Sinemurian) of Lyme Regis, England


Thaumatodracon wiedenrothi  Smith & Araújo, 2017

Illustration: L. Soares. DOI: 10.1127/pala/308/2017/89  

Abstract

An excellently preserved partial skeleton of a rhomaleosaurid plesiosaurian (NLMH 106. 058) from the Sinemurian (Lower Jurassic) of Lyme Regis, England, is described. The material consists of a complete cranium, mandible, and articulated cervical vertebral column. It is noteworthy because large-headed rhomaleosaurids are rare from this stratigraphic horizon and it is taxonomically distinct. The material is referred to a new taxonThaumatodracon wiedenrothi gen. nov. et sp. nov, diagnosed by two autapomorphies: 1. a pronounced transverse trough on the posterior margin of the dorsal ramus of the squamosal; 2. possibly paired anteriorly tapering triangular basioccipital processes. It also possesses a unique combination of other characters including a ‘short’ premaxillary rostrum (length and width subequal), five premaxillary alveoli, premaxilla-maxilla sutures parallel anterior to the external nares, frontals contact on the midline, prefrontal-frontal suture convex and gently curved medially, mandibular symphyseal region spatulate and ‘short’ (length and width subequal), prominent dorsally concave medial flange anteromedial to the articular glenoid, robust rod-like axis neural spine with a circular transverse cross section, and cervical neural spines with a mediolaterally expanded apex. The taxon shares some of these characters with earlier Hettangian rhomaleosaurids (e. g. Atychodracon, Eurycleidus), and other characters with later Toarcian rhomaleosaurids (e. g. Rhomaleosaurus sensu stricto and Meyerasaurus). Inclusion of Thaumatodracon as an additional operational taxonomic unit in several existing cladistic analyses demonstrates that it occupies a relatively derived position within Rhomaleosauridae. A morphometric multivariate analysis of Lower Jurassic rhomaleosaurids shows that Thaumatodracon is also proportionally intermediate between known rhomaleosaurid taxa. Thaumatodracon is therefore a stratigraphically and anatomically intermediate taxon that fills a gap in our knowledge of the evolution of this macro-predatory plesiosaurian clade.

Keywords: Plesiosauria, Sauropterygia, Rhomaleosauridae, Lower Jurassic, Lyme Regis


Thaumatodracon wiedenrothi
Illustration: Luzia Soares. 

 Adam S. Smith and Ricardo Araújo. 2017. Thaumatodracon wiedenrothi, A Morphometrically and Stratigraphically Intermediate New Rhomaleosaurid Plesiosaurian from the Lower Jurassic (Sinemurian) of Lyme Regis. Palaeontographica, Abt. A: Palaeozoology – Stratigraphy 4-6; 89 - 125.  DOI: 10.1127/pala/308/2017/89  

 Adam S. Smith and Ricardo Araújo. 2017. Morphometric data and phylogenetic analysis of Thaumatodracon wiedenrothiPANGAEA. DOI: 10.1594/PANGAEA.870543

   


Saturday, March 25, 2017

[Paleontology • 2017] Cascolus ravitis • A New Crustacean from the Herefordshire (Silurian) Lagerstätte, UK , and Its Significance in Malacostracan Evolution


Cascolus ravitis 
Siveter, Briggs, Siveter, Sutton & Legg, 2017  


Abstract

Cascolus ravitis gen. et sp. nov. is a three-dimensionally preserved fossil crustacean with soft parts from the Herefordshire (Silurian) Lagerstätte, UK. It is characterized by a head with a head shield and five limb pairs, and a thorax (pereon) with nine appendage-bearing segments followed by an apodous abdomen (pleon). All the appendages except the first are biramous and have a gnathobase. The post-mandibular appendages are similar one to another, and bear petal-shaped epipods that probably functioned as a part of the respiratory–circulatory system. Cladistic analysis resolves the new taxon as a stem-group leptostracan (Malacostraca). This well-preserved arthropod provides novel insights into the evolution of appendage morphology, tagmosis and the possible respiratory–circulatory physiology of a basal malacostracan.

An international team of scientists led by the University of Leicester has discovered a new 430 million-year-old fossil and has named it in honour of Sir David Attenborough - who grew up on the University campus.  

Systematic palaeontology

Phylum Arthropoda
Subphylum Crustacea

Class Malacostraca
Subclass Phyllocarida

Order Leptostraca

Genus Cascolus gen. nov.

Type species: Cascolus ravitis sp. nov.

Etymology: The new crustacean is named in honour of the naturalist and broadcaster Sir David Attenborough, who grew up on University College Leicester campus, in celebration of his 90th birthday. Latin castrum stronghold’ and colus dwelling in’; alluding to the Middle/Old English source for the surname ‘Attenborough, derived from attenat the’ and burgh a fortified place’. Latin Ratae, the Roman name for Leicester, vita life’ and commeatis ‘a messenger’.


  Diagnosis of genus (monotypic) and species: An elongate body comprising a head with a head shield, pedunculate eyes and five limb pairs; and a trunk consisting of a thorax (pereon) with nine limb-bearing segments and an apodous abdomen (pleon). The first appendage is uniramous and has three slender flagella longer than the body. All other appendages are biramous and have a gnathobase. The post-mandibular appendages are similar to one another, except that the fourth head appendage bears a single petal-shaped epipod, and the fifth head appendage and each trunk appendage bear two petal-shaped epipods.

  Material: Only known from the holotype OUMNH C.29698 (figure 1v), a specimen with soft parts reconstructed in three dimensions (figure 1a–u).

  Locality and horizon: Herefordshire, England, UK; Wenlock Series, Silurian.


David J. Siveter, Derek E. G. Briggs, Derek J. Siveter, Mark D. Sutton and David Legg. 2017. A New Crustacean from the Herefordshire (Silurian) Lagerstätte, UK, and Its Significance in Malacostracan Evolution. Proceedings of the Royal Society B.  DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2017.0279 

 430 million-year-old fossil named in honor of Sir David Attenborough
 http://phy.so/409322871   @physorg_com

Monday, October 31, 2016

[Paleontology • 2016] Aquilonifer spinosusTiny Iindividuals attached to A New Silurian Arthropod from Herefordshire Lagerstätte of England, Suggest A Unique Mode of Brood Care

Aquilonifer spinosus 
Briggs, Siveter, Siveter, Sutton & Legg, 2016  


Significance
The paper reports a remarkable arthropod from the Silurian Herefordshire Lagerstätte of England. The fossil reveals a unique association in an early Paleozoic arthropod involving tethering of 10 tiny individuals each by a single thread to the tergites so that their appearance is reminiscent of kites. The evidence suggests that these are juveniles and that the specimen records a unique brooding strategy. This is part of a diversity of complex brooding behaviors in early arthropods heralding the variety that occurs today. The possibility that the small individuals represent a different arthropod, possibly parasitic, which colonized the larger individual, seems less likely.

Abstract
The ∼430-My-old Herefordshire, United Kingdom, Lagerstätte has yielded a diversity of remarkably preserved invertebrates, many of which provide fundamental insights into the evolutionary history and ecology of particular taxa. Here we report a new arthropod with 10 tiny arthropods tethered to its tergites by long individual threads. The head of the host, which is covered by a shield that projects anteriorly, bears a long stout uniramous antenna and a chelate limb followed by two biramous appendages. The trunk comprises 11 segments, all bearing limbs and covered by tergites with long slender lateral spines. A short telson bears long parallel cerci. Our phylogenetic analysis resolves the new arthropod as a stem-group mandibulate. The evidence suggests that the tethered individuals are juveniles and the association represents a complex brooding behavior. Alternative possibilities—that the tethered individuals represent a different epizoic or parasitic arthropod—appear less likely.

Keywords: Arthropod; Silurian; brood care; juvenile; Herefordshire Lagerstätte




Aquilonifer spinosus is a new genus and species of arthropod from the Herefordshire Lagerstätte, a late Wenlock (mid-Silurian) volcaniclastic deposit in Herefordshire, United Kingdom. It is preserved, as are the other fossils from this Lagerstätte, in three dimensions as a calcitic void fill in a carbonate concretion. The name of the new taxon refers to the fancied resemblance between the tethered individuals and kites, and echoes the title of the 2003 novel The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini (aquila, eagle or kite-fer, suffix meaning carry; thus aquilonifer, kite bearer; spinosusspiny, referring to the long lateral spines on the tergites). The material is a single specimen, the holotype OUMNH C.29695, registered at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History (Fig. 1 and Movie S1).


Diagnosis. Features include a head shield with rostrum-like anterior projection, large uniramous antenna, chelate limb, and two other biramous appendages in the head, the last similar to those of the trunk; an elongated trunk with long, slender lateral spines on the 11 tergites, with all trunk somites bearing limbs of which all but the last are biramous; and a short telson and long cerci.

......



Derek E. G. Briggs, Derek J. Siveter, David J. Siveter, Mark D. Sutton and David Legg. 2016. Tiny Iindividuals attached to A New Silurian Arthropod Suggest A Unique Mode of Brood Care.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 113(16) DOI:  10.1073/pnas.1600489113

Friday, August 26, 2016

[Botany • 2014] Hieracium attenboroughianum • A New Species of Hawkweed (Asteraceae) from the Brecon Beacons, Wales, the UK


Hieracium attenboroughianum  T.C.G.Rich

Figure 3 Pictures of Hieracium attenboroughianum.
(a) Locality on NW side of Cribyn. (b) Habitat on Old Red Sandstone mountain rocks. (c) Plant. (d) Capitulum. 

Abstract
Hieracium attenboroughianum is described from the Brecon Beacons, Wales. It is a member of the H. britannicum group in Hieracium section Stelligera Zahn, related to H. britannicoides P. D. Sell but differing in cupped, dark green leaves and sparse, medium simple eglandular hairs and many glandular hairs on the involucral bracts. About 300 plants occur on Old Red Sandstone mountain ledges on Cribyn (V.c. 42). It is named after David Attenborough. It is classified under the IUCN Threat Category ‘Endangered’.

Keywords: David Attenborough, endemic, Wales




Hieracium attenboroughianum  T.C.G.Rich




 Tim Rich. 2014. Hieracium attenboroughianum (Asteraceae), A New Species of Hawkweed.  New Journal of Botany. 4(3); 172-175. DOI:  10.1179/2042349714Y.0000000051

   

Sunday, June 19, 2016

[Paleontology • 2016] Wahlisaurus massarae • A New Leptonectid Ichthyosaur from the Lower Jurassic (Hettangian) of Nottinghamshire, England, UK, and the Taxonomic Usefulness of the Ichthyosaurian Coracoid


Wahlisaurus massarae 
 Lomax. 2016

Abstract
Thousands of ichthyosaurs have been discovered from the rich Lower Jurassic deposits of the UK, with the majority collected from along the Lyme Regis-Charmouth area of the Dorset coast. Here, I describe a new leptonectid ichthyosaur, Wahlisaurus massarae gen. et sp. nov., based on a partial skull and an incomplete skeleton collected from the Lower Jurassic (Hettangian) of Nottinghamshire, England. Wahlisaurus can be referred to the Leptonectidae through the possession of an extremely slender and delicate snout, and a mandible shorter than the snout which produces an overbite. This referral is supported by a phylogenetic analysis. The new taxon is distinguished from other ichthyosaurs through a unique combination of characters and autapomorphies of the pectoral girdle including the presence of both a scapular-coracoid foramen and a large and roughly ovoid coracoid foramen. A coracoid foramen has only previously been reported in the Triassic ichthyosaur Cymbospondylus. The peculiar coracoid morphology further highlights the taxonomic utility of coracoids in ichthyosaurs. The aforementioned features demonstrate that W. massarae cannot be referred to any currently recognized leptonectid. Wahlisaurus is the ninth Lower Jurassic ichthyosaur genus to be recognized worldwide, and the fifth documented in the Lower Lias Group.

Keywords: ichthyosaur, Wahlisaurus massarae, Nottinghamshire, leptonectid, Lower Jurassic, Hettangian


Systematic palaeontology

Order Ichthyosauria de Blainville, 1835
Minorder Parvipelvia Motani, 1999b
Suborder Neoichthyosauria Sander, 2000

Family Leptonectidae Maisch, 1998
Genus Wahlisaurus gen. nov.

Type species. Wahlisaurus massarae sp. nov.

 Derivation of name. In honour of William (Bill) Wahl for his contribution to the study of Mesozoic marine reptiles and for introducing the author to the study of the group.




Wahlisaurus massarae sp. nov.
Holotype. LEICT G454.1951.5, a partial skull and an associated incomplete skeleton comprising the pectoral girdle, humeri, pelvic elements, partial hind fins, vertebrae and ribs. Only known specimen.

Derivation of name. In honour of Professor Judy Massare for her significant contribution to the study of Mesozoic marine reptiles, especially ichthyosaurs, and for introducing the author to the study of the group.

Diagnosis. Small-bodied leptonectid ichthyosaur with the following autapomorphies: coracoid with a large, ovoid foramen, a coracoid foramen is present in Cymbospondylus but it is much smaller in this genus (Merriam 1908; Sander 1989); presence of both a coracoid foramen and scapular-coracoid foramen (fenestra coracoscapularis), the latter formed by articulation of the coracoid and scapula; a coracoid with a posterior notch that is much more developed than the anterior notch. Three other features may be autapomorphies: humerus deltopectoral crest prominent and 2.5 times greater than the dorsal process; dorsoventral width of the humerus is greater than the anteroposterior width, which results in a D-shape in proximal view; and slender, long, needle-like teeth with marginally recurved crowns and large, bulbous infolded roots.

......


Figure 2. Basioccipital, rostrum and dentition of LEICT G454.1951.5, Wahlisaurus massarae gen. et sp. nov. 
A, basioccipital in posterior view; note the extensive extracondylar area, fragment of the left stapes and portion of basisphenoid. B, ventral view of mandible and snout with anterior portion of dentary rotated (in dorsal view) and positioned adjacent (dashed line indicates point of fit); note the slenderness of the rostrum and the presence of an overbite. C, close-up of the large, long and robust teeth and some of the needle-like teeth positioned under the maxilla. D, close-up of three dentary teeth; note the ‘waisted’ morphology, recurved crown and infolded root.
 Abbreviations: bas, basisphenoid; den, dentary; mx, maxilla (right maxilla); pmx, premaxilla; sta, stapes.   Scale bars: A = 5 cm; B = 10 cm; C = 3 cm.

Figure 1. Map of Nottinghamshire including the location of Normanton Hills (indicated by a star), near Normanton on Soar, the discovery site of LEICT: G454.1951.5 (holotype of Wahlisaurus massarae gen. et sp. nov.). The additional localitie have yielded other ichthyosaur specimens from the county. Reproduced from Lomax & Gibson (2015).

Conclusions:
Wahlisaurus massarae gen. et sp. nov. is a new leptonectid ichthyosaur from the Lower Jurassic (lower Hettangian) of Nottinghamshire, England. It possesses a unique combination of characters that distinguish it from all other ichthyosaurs, including autapomorphic characters of the pectoral girdle such as a large, ovoid coracoid foramen and the combined presence of a coracoid foramen and scapular-coracoid foramen. These features further highlight the taxonomic utility of pectoral girdle elements in ichthyosaurs.

The recognition of Wahlisaurus massarae as a leptonectid adds to the currently valid taxa that form the family Leptonectidae (Maisch, 1998) Leptonectes (L. tenuirostrisLsolei and L. moorei), Excalibosaurus costini and Eurhinosaurus longirostris and unequivocally adds an additional region for the geographical occurrence of leptonectids. Presently, leptonectids are confidently identified from the following locations: Leptonectes tenuirostris from Dorset, Somerset, Leicestershire, Warwickshire (England: McGowan 1996; Smith & Radley 2007), Dusslingen (Germany: Maisch 1999) and Unter Hauenstein (Switzerland: Maisch & Reisdorf 2006); Leptonectes moorei from Dorset (England: McGowan & Milner 1999); Leptonectes solei from Dorset (England: McGowan 1993); Excalibosaurus costini from Somerset (England: McGowan 2003); and Eurhinosaurus longirostris from Yorkshire (England: McGowan 1994a), Holzmaden and surrounding areas (Germany: McGowan 1979), Staffelegg (Switzerland: Reisdorf et al. 2011), Dudelange (Luxembourg), Noirefontaine and Marcoux (France: Fischer et al. 2011b). Including Wahlisaurus, a total of nine ichthyosaur genera are recognized from the Lower Jurassic. The discovery of a new ichthyosaur from the well-studied British Lower Jurassic demonstrates that new taxa may yet be found through detailed re-examination of museum collections as well as new discoveries.


Dean R. Lomax. 2016. A New Leptonectid Ichthyosaur from the Lower Jurassic (Hettangian) of Nottinghamshire, England, UK, and the Taxonomic Usefulness of the Ichthyosaurian Coracoid. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. DOI: 10.1080/14772019.2016.1183149  

New 200 million-year-old British species of marine reptile discovered
  http://phy.so/385103375 via @physorg_com


Sunday, January 24, 2016

[Paleontology • 2016] Dracoraptor hanigani • The Oldest Jurassic Dinosaur: A Basal Neotheropod from the Hettangian of Great Britain


Dracoraptor hanigani 
Martill, Vidovic,  Howells & Nudds, 2016

Artwork by Bob Nichols (paleocreations.com). 

Abstract

Approximately 40% of a skeleton including cranial and postcranial remains representing a new genus and species of basal neotheropod dinosaur is described. It was collected from fallen blocks from a sea cliff that exposes Late Triassic and Early Jurassic marine and quasi marine strata on the south Wales coast near the city of Cardiff. Matrix comparisons indicate that the specimen is from the lithological Jurassic part of the sequence, below the first occurrence of the index ammonite Psiloceras planorbis and above the last occurrence of the Rhaetian conodont Chirodella verecunda. Associated fauna of echinoderms and bivalves indicate that the specimen had drifted out to sea, presumably from the nearby Welsh Massif and associated islands (St David’s Archipelago). Its occurrence close to the base of the Blue Lias Formation (Lower Jurassic, Hettangian) makes it the oldest known Jurassic dinosaur and it represents the first dinosaur skeleton from the Jurassic of Wales. A cladistic analysis indicates basal neotheropodan affinities, but the specimen retains plesiomorphic characters which it shares with Tawa and Daemonosaurus.


Systematic Palaeontology

Dinosauria Owen, 1842
Saurischia Seeley, 1888

Theropoda Marsh, 1881
Neotheropoda Bakker, 1986

Dracoraptor gen. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: DFD000B9-D42B-495D-B807-DCBA3B2C3745

Dracoraptor hanigani sp. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 21D0AF91-5893-47D6-9C3B-EF985487C60B

Holotype: NMW 2015.5G.1–2015.5G.11 is a disarticulated, but associated partial skeleton with elements of the skull, including both premaxillae, both maxillae, some teeth, a lacrimal, partial jugal, post orbital, squamosal, fragmentary lower jaws and a possible hyoid, and postcranial skeleton including two cervical vertebrae, posterior elements of the vertebral column (lumbar and caudal vertebrae), distal forelimb, ischium and pubis, hind limb with femur, and fragmentary tibia with proximal fibula. There are also cervical ribs, thoracic ribs and several unidentified fragments (Table 1, Fig 5).


Fig 7. Left premaxilla in situ with tooth in lateral view.

Fig 9. Tooth, assumed to be from right maxilla with which it lies adjacent.
(A) Entire tooth with crown and root. Note that the tip is in good condition with minimal wear.

Block containing the hip and leg bones of Dracoraptor hanigani
photo: National Museum of Wales  DOI:  10.1371/journal.pone.0145713

Etymology: The genus name Dracoraptor is from Draco alluding to the dragon of Wales with raptor, meaning robber, a commonly employed suffix for theropod dinosaurs. The species name honours Nick and Rob Hanigan who discovered the skeleton and generously donated it to Amgueddfa Cymru-National Museum of Wales.

Locality and horizon: The new specimen was collected from several limestone and mudstone blocks among debris from a small rock fall at the base of the cliff on the east side of Lavernock Point (National Grid reference ST 187681). The cliff at this locality is ~7 m high and exposes the top of the Late Triassic Penarth Group on the east side, and the Blue Lias Formation of the Lower Lias Group forming the point. Structurally this is the southwest dipping limb of the Lavernock syncline in the Bristol Channel Basin (Figs 2–4). The cliff fall in which Dracoraptor was discovered comprises material restricted to the lowest two to three metres of the section and comprises debris mainly from the Bull Cliff Member of the Blue Lias Formation (see above for detailed discussion of the age of these strata). Lithological and bed thickness comparisons indicate that the dinosaur comes from either bed 7 or bed 9 (Fig 4), of the Bull Cliff Member, both of which contain a thin, but distinctive bed of broken calcitic shelly material.

Diagnosis: A basal neotheropod with the following autapomorphies and unique combination of plesiomorphies: Three teeth in the premaxilla, slender maxillary process of jugal, large narial opening with slender subnarial bar, anteriorly directed pubis considerably longer than ischium, and large dorsal process on distal tarsal IV.

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Fig 29. Dracoraptor hanigani restored as a shoreline dwelling predator and scavenger.
Artwork by Bob Nichols (paleocreations.com).

Discussion

Dracoraptor hanigani is clearly a saurischian dinosaur on account of its pelvic construction, while the possession of serrated, recurved laterally compressed teeth among other characters demonstrates its theropod affinities. The cladistic analysis finds Dracoraptor to lie within Neotheropoda, but is basal within the clade. Dracoraptor can be distinguished from other basal neotheropods from the Late Triassic and Early Jurassic on a variety of criteria, not necessarily apomorphic. However, Dracoraptor possesses a combination of basal characters that make it difficult to place phylogenetically. The shallow antorbital fossa of the maxilla, an anteriorly located pleurocoel on the cervical vertebrae and the presence of an obturator notch in the ischium indicates neotheropodan affinities, but many of the other neotheropodan synapomorphies cannot be identified in Dracoraptor. The cladistic analysis recovers Dracoraptor as the sister taxon to “Syntarsuskayentakatae and all other coelophysids placing it close to the base of Coelophysoidea (Fig 28). However, several of the synapomorphies of Coelophysoidea are coded ‘?’ for Dracoraptor. Notably the horizontal ridge of the maxilla parallel to the tooth row cannot be seen as both left and right maxillae expose their internal surface. The sublacrimal process of the jugal of Dracoraptor is certainly not pointed as it is in some non-coelophysoid theropods, but this process is slender, slightly damaged and it is ambiguous as to whether it is bluntly rounded which is typical for coelophysoids. Dracoraptor retains many basal features, and would appear to be very basal within Neotheropoda. It is likely that further preparation of the specimen will enable the identification of additional characters that may better resolve its phylogenetic affinities.

The presence of Dracoraptor in marine strata may be of little significance with regard to the animal’s autecology, but we have restored it as a shore-line dwelling animal (Fig 29).


David M. Martill, Steven U. Vidovic, Cindy Howells and John R. Nudds. 2016. The Oldest Jurassic Dinosaur: A Basal Neotheropod from the Hettangian of Great Britain.
PLoS ONE. 11(1): e0145713.  DOI:  10.1371/journal.pone.0145713



Welsh dinosaur bones confirmed as new Jurassic species
Named Dracoraptor hanigani, meaning ‘dragon robber’, the dog-sized meat-eating predator is ‘the best dinosaur fossil Wales has ever had’

Dinosaur discovered: UK's oldest known species of Jurassic dinosaur found in Wales is a distant relative of the T Rex http://ibt.uk/A6SO9  @IBTimesUK #walesdinosaur
‘Dragon thief’ dinosaur named | UoP News http://www.port.ac.uk/uopnews/2016/01/20/dragon-thief-dinosaur-named/