Crossvallia

Crossvallia is an extinct genus of penguins. It includes two species, C. unienwillia and ?C. waiparensis. Their anatomy suggests that the genus is closely related to the Anthropornithinae.[1]

Crossvallia
Temporal range: Late Paleocene
~55 Ma
restoration of C. unienwillia
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Sphenisciformes
Family: Spheniscidae
Genus: Crossvallia
Tambussi et al. 2005
Species

Crossvallia unienwillia (type) (fossil)?Crossvallia waiparensis (fossil)

Taxonomy

Order Sphenisciformes

  • Family Spheniscidae
    • Genus Crossvallia
      • C. unienwillia Tambussi et al., 2005
      • C. waiparensis Mayr et al., 2019

C. unienwillia was the first of the genus to be described, whose remains were recovered from and named after the Late Paleocene Cross Valley Formation on Seymour Island, Antarctica.[2] It measured about 140 cm (4.6 ft).[1]

In August 2019, a new species of Crossvallia, C. waiparensis, was described based off leg bone fossils from Waipara, New Zealand.[3] It measured about 160 cm (5.2 ft) and weighed around 70–80 kg.[4] It is thought to have lived in the Paleocene 66–56 million years ago, and close relatives of C. waiparensis may have lived in the Antarctic.[4] The fossils were discovered in 2019 by amateur palaeontologist Leigh Love. [5]

gollark: I'm trialling saying "just as planned" instead of "as planned".
gollark: Just as planned.
gollark: Which is less than a yottabyte. By quite a lot. It's a shame.
gollark: 2^32 ≈ 10^9, so 2^64=(2^32)^2 ≈ (10^9)^2 = 10^18.
gollark: No. Anyway, I have reached the conclusion that you could not in fact have a yottabyte of RAM on a 64-bit system.

References

  1. Tambussi, Claudia P.; Reguero, Marcelo A.; Marenssi, Sergio A.; Santillana, Sergio N. (2005). "Crossvallia unienwillia, a new Spheniscidae (Sphenisciformes, Aves) from the Late Paleocene of Antarctica". Geobios. 38 (5): 667–675. doi:10.1016/j.geobios.2004.02.003.
  2. Cross Valley at Fossilworks.org
  3. Mayr, Gerald; De Pietri, Vanesa L.; Love, Leigh; Mannering, Al; Scofield, R. Paul (2019). "Leg bones of a new penguin species from the Waipara Greensand add to the diversity of very large-sized Sphenisciformes in the Paleocene of New Zealand". Alcheringa. doi:10.1080/03115518.2019.1641619.
  4. "Pingvin". Magyar Narancs (in Hungarian). XXXI (34): 7. 2019-08-22. ISSN 1586-0647.
  5. "Human-sized penguin discovered in Waipara". RNZ. 2019-08-14. Retrieved 2019-08-14.
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