Sunday, July 12, 2020

[Paleontology • 2020] Trierarchuncus prairiensis • the Last Alvarezsaurid: Hell Creek Formation (uppermost Maastrichtian), Montana


 Trierarchuncus prairiensis
Fowler, Wilson, Freedman Fowler, Noto, Anduza & Horner, 2020


Highlights
• A growth series of hand claws and other fossil material from a new taxon, Trierarchuncus prairiensis, of the unusual theropod family Alvarezsauridae is described.
• One claw is the most complete known for Alvarezsauridae and challenges assumptions about the lack of curvature in derived members of the group and demonstrates that alvarezsaurid claws could be of higher curvature than typically reconstructed.
• The possible growth series suggests that alvarezsaurid manual unguals may have changed morphology through ontogeny, with younger individuals retaining more basal characteristics. This has implications for taxonomy and phylogeny of the group as some taxa are described based on probable juvenile remains.
• Trierarchuncus derives from the uppermost Maastrichtian Hell Creek Formation of Montana, and is therefore the youngest known alvarezsaurid and was one of the very last dinosaurs, which went extinct at the K–Pg boundary mass extinction.

Abstract
The enigmatic Alvarezsauria (Dinosauria: Theropoda) are characterized by extremely short forelimbs with a single functional digit bearing a large, robust ungual. Alvarezsauria are first recorded from the Jurassic of China, but are otherwise mostly known from the Cretaceous of South America and Asia, including a number of relatively complete skeletons. North America has yielded only a fragmentary skeleton from the lower Maastrichtian Horseshoe Canyon Formation, Alberta, and a pubis, partial ischium, and metatarsal from the upper Maastrichtian Hell Creek Formation, Montana, and Lance Formation, Wyoming. Here we describe new alvarezsaurid material from the Hell Creek Formation, Montana, comprising a metatarsal III, distal end of a radius, and three manual digit (MD)-I unguals, which form a progressive size series. One MD-I ungual is the most complete yet described, and is much more curved than typically depicted for Alvarezsauridae. Manual D-I unguals are of particular interest as they undergo a number of changes within the clade, including enclosure of the ventral blood vessel groove, development of a ventral sulcus, and increased robusticity and rugosity. Comparison among the new specimens suggests that these features also develop ontogenetically, which may have taxonomic implications. Stratigraphic data shows that alvarezsaurids occur through most of the ∼85 m thick Hell Creek Formation, with the uppermost specimen occurring ∼10 m below the upper contact with the Fort Union Formation. As such these are the youngest known alvarezsaurid remains and demonstrate that the clade survived at least until ∼1–200 kyrs before the Cretaceous–Paleogene mass extinction.

Keywords: Dinosaur, Theropoda, Alvarezsauridae, Mononykus, Hell Creek Formation, Late Cretaceous


 Systematic Paleontology 
Dinosauria Owen, 1842 
Saurischia Seeley, 1888 

Theropoda Marsh, 1881 
Maniraptora Gauthier, 1986 

Alvarezsauridae Bonaparte, 1991 

Trierarchuncus prairiensis gen. et sp. nov. 

Derivation of name. The genus name refers to the 'trierarch', specifically a seafaring ship's captain (trirēmē ships of ancient Greece), and 'uncus' meaning hook (Latin). Species name means 'of the prairie', referring to the gentle plains of eastern Montana (in particular the American Prairie Reserve) where the new material was discovered.

  


Denver W. Fowler, John P. Wilson, Elizabeth A. Freedman Fowler, Christopher R. Noto, Daniel Anduza and John R.Horner. 2020. Trierarchuncus prairiensis gen. et sp. nov., the last alvarezsaurid: Hell Creek Formation (uppermost Maastrichtian), Montana. Cretaceous Research. In Press. DOI: 10.1016/j.cretres.2020.104560

Trierarchuncus prairiensis (“Captain Hook of the prairie”): a new species of bizarre hook-handed alvarezsaurid dinosaur.