Augustasaurus

Augustasaurus is a genus of aquatic sauropterygian reptile belonging to the Pistosauria, a clade containing plesiosaurs and their close relatives. Pistosaurus and Augustasaurus were thought to be the only known members of the family Pistosauridae.[1] However, some recent cladistic analyses found Augustasaurus to be a more advanced pistosaur, as a sister group of the order Plesiosauria.[2][3] The only known species of Augustasaurus is Augustasaurus hagdorni, which was first described in 1997.

Augustasaurus
Temporal range: Middle Triassic
Skull of Augustasaurus hagdorni in the Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Superorder: Sauropterygia
Clade: Eosauropterygia
Clade: Pistosauroidea
Clade: Pistosauria
Genus: Augustasaurus
Sander et al., 1997
Type species
Augustasaurus hagdorni
Sander et al., 1997

Etymology

The first part of Augustasaurus' name comes from the Augusta Mountains of northwestern Nevada,[4] USA, where its fossil bones were first discovered.[1] The second part of the name is the Greek word sauros (σαυρος), which means "lizard" or "reptile."[4] The type species, Augustasaurus hagdorni, was named in honor of the paleontologist Hans Hagdorn.[4]

Description

Life restoration of Augustasaurus hagdorni.

Augustasaurus' skull shares many general characteristics with its relative, Pistosaurus, such as tall, blade-like upper temporal arches.[1] The skull's elongated rostrum tapers to a dull point, the anterior premaxillary and maxillary teeth have been described as "fang-like",[1] and the squamosal makes a box-like suspensorium.[1]

The dorsal neural spines of Augustasaurus are low with rugose tops.[5] Its coracoids are large plates similar to those in other plesiosaurs.[6] However, the coracoid foramen are missing from Agustasaurus, in a way similar to those in the pistosauroid Corosaurus.[6] Its cervical ribs have anterior process,[7] and like most plesiosaurs, Augustasaurus' vertebrae have "thickened transverse processes".[7]

Distribution

Augustasaurus is known from the Augusta Mountains of northwestern Nevada (United States). The holotype specimen was found in the Favret Formation, which dates from the mid-Triassic period, of Pershing County, Nevada.[8]

gollark: It's... um... Haskell?
gollark: ```rustimpl Monad<T> for Burrito<T> {}```
gollark: ```haskellclass Monad monadic where (>>=) :: monadic apples -> (apples -> monadic burritos) -> monadic burritos return :: burritos -> monadic burritos```
gollark: Anyone can invent monads. They are simply burritos.
gollark: It's not the dual of monad. It'd be the same as monads, but backwards, so nobody is scared by it.

See also

References

  1. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. Article: pp. 577–592. THE SKULL OF THE PISTOSAUR AUGUSTASAURUS FROM THE MIDDLE TRIASSIC OF NORTHWESTERN NEVADA. OLIVIER RIEPPEL, P. MARTIN SANDER, and GLENN W. STORRS. 1997
  2. Cheng, Y.-N.; Sato, T.; Wu, X.-C.; Li, C. (2006). "First complete pistosauroid from the Triassic of China" (PDF). Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 26 (2): 501–503. doi:10.1671/0272-4634(2006)26[501:fcpftt]2.0.co;2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-09-28. Retrieved 2011-11-02.
  3. Hilary F. Ketchum & Roger B. J. Benson (2011). "A new pliosaurid (Sauropterygia, Plesiosauria) from the Oxford Clay Formation (Middle Jurassic, Callovian) of England: evidence for a gracile, longirostrine grade of Early-Middle Jurassic pliosaurids". Special Papers in Palaeontology. 86: 109–129. doi:10.1111/j.1475-4983.2011.01083.x.
  4. "Plesiosaur.com entry on Augustasaurus". Archived from the original on 2007-12-10. Retrieved 2008-07-16.
  5. O’Keefe. Pg.52
  6. O'Keefe Pg. 5
  7. O'Keefe. Pg. 51
  8. O'Keefe Pg.9
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