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Allodaposuchus

Allodaposuchus is an extinct genus of crocodyliforms that lived in what is now southern Europe during the Campanian and Maastrichtian stages of the Late Cretaceous. Although generally classified as a non-crocodylian eusuchian crocodylomorph, it is sometimes placed as one of the earliest true crocodylians. Allodaposuchus is one of the most common Late Cretaceous crocodylomorphs from Europe, with fossils known from Romania, Spain, and France.

Allodaposuchus
Temporal range: Campanian-Maastrichtian
~84.9–66.043 Ma
A. precedens skull
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Archosauria
Clade: Pseudosuchia
Clade: Crocodylomorpha
Clade: Crocodyliformes
Clade: Eusuchia
Clade: Allodaposuchidae
Genus: Allodaposuchus
Nopcsa, 1928
Type species
Allodaposuchus precedens
Nopcsa, 1928
Species
  • A. precedens Nopcsa, 1928
  • A. subjuniperus? Puértolas et al., 2013 (also Agaresuchus)
  • A. palustris Blanco et al., 2014
  • A. hulki Blanco et al., 2015
  • A. iberoarmoricanus Blanco, 2021
  • A. fontisensis? (Narváez et al., 2016; originally Agaresuchus)
  • A. megadontos? (Narváez et al. 2015; originally Lohuecosuchus)
  • A. mechinorum? (Narváez et al. 2015; originally Lohuecosuchus)
Synonyms

Description edit

 
Restoration of A. precedens

Like many other Cretaceous crocodylomorphs, Allodaposuchus has a relatively small body size compared to living crocodylians. The largest known specimen of Allodaposuchus belongs to an individual that was probably around 3 metres (9.8 ft) long.[1] Although the shape varies between species, in general Allodaposuchus has a short, flattened, and rounded skull. Allodaposuchus precedens has a brevirostrine or "short-snouted" skull with a snout about the same length as the skull table (the region of the skull behind the eye sockets) and A. subjuniperus has a mesorostrine or "middle-snouted" skull with a snout that is longer than the skull table.[1][2] The main feature that distinguishes Allodaposuchus species from other related crocodylomorphs is the orientation of a groove at the back of the skull called the cranioquadrate passage; unlike the cranioquadrate passages of other crocodylomorphs, which are only visible at the back of the skull, the cranioquadrate passage of Allodaposuchus is visible when the skull is viewed from the side.[3]

At least one species of Allodaposuchus, A. hulki, may have adaptations that would have allowed it to live on land for extended periods of time. A. hulki has large sinuses in its skull that are not seen in any other crocodylian living or extinct and may have aided it in hearing out of water, as well as lightening the skull. Moreover, A. hulki has well-developed muscle attachments on its scapula, humerus, and ulna bones that would have allowed the forelimbs to have been held in a semi-erect stance suitable for walking over land. Remains of A. hulki come from interbedded sandstones and marls that, based on the presence of charophyte algae, likely formed in ephemeral ponds in a large floodplain far from permanent bodies of water like lakes or rivers. A. hulki may therefore have spent much of its time out of water, travelling between these ponds for food.[4]

History of study edit

While there are several described species of Allodaposuchus, the precise membership of the group is currently disputed.

Allodaposuchus precedens edit

The type species of Allodaposuchus, A. precedens, was named by Hungarian paleontologist Franz Nopcsa in 1928 from Vălioara, Romania.[5] Nopcsa found bone fragments in a deposit of the Hațeg Basin that dates back to the late Maastrichtian stage – the very end of the Late Cretaceous. Several partial skulls from Spain and France were attributed to A. precedens in 2001.[6] Some of these skulls came from Campanian-age deposits slightly older than those in Romania, meaning that the species must have persisted for about 5 million years.[1]

A 2013 study proposed that the French and Spanish fossils assigned to A. precedens in 2001 might actually represent a new unnamed species of Allodaposuchus currently identified as Allodaposuchus sp.[1] A study published in 2005 had suggested that these fossils belong to several different genera of crocodylomorphs and that the original Romanian material is too fragmentary to assign to its own genus, making Allodaposuchus a nomen dubium or "dubious name".[7] However, the 2013 study reaffirmed the Romanian material's distinctiveness from other European Cretaceous crocodylomorphs and therefore reaffirmed the validity of Allodaposuchus as a genus.[1]

Allodaposuchus (Agaresuchus) subjuniperus ? edit

In 2013, a second species of Allodaposuchus, A. subjuniperus, was named on the basis of a skull from the late-Maastrichtian Conquès Formation, part of the Tremp Group, in the province of Huesca, Spain. The skull was found underneath a juniper tree whose roots had grown between the bones, hence the species name subjuniperus or "under juniper" in Latin.[1] However, in 2016, A. subjuniperus was moved to a new genus, Agaresuchus along with the type species of that genus, A. fontisensis, on the grounds that the Spanish species were sufficiently distinct from A. precedens.[8] In 2021, a phylogenetic analysis by Blanco disputed this result, suggesting that both A. fontisensis and A. subjuniperus belong within the genus Allodaposuchus proper, alongside the two species of Lohuecosuchus: L. megadontos and L. mechinorum.[9]

Allodaposuchus palustris edit

In 2014, A. palustris was described from a partial skull and other skeletal fragments found in Maastrichtian age sediments of the Tremp Formation in a fossil locality called Fumanya Sud in the southern Pyrenees.[10] These remains allowed for the first detailed description of the postcranial (non-skull) anatomy of Allodaposuchus.

Allodaposuchus hulki edit

A fourth species of Allodaposuchus, A. hulki, was named in 2015 and also came from the Tremp Formation, although this time in a locality called Casa Fabà. The species is named after the Hulk from Marvel Comics, in reference to features on the bones that suggest it had strong muscles.[4]

Allodaposuchus iberoarmoricanus edit

A. palustris was described by Blanco in 2021 based on fossils discovered in Late Campanian-aged fluvial deposits in Velaux-La Bastide Neuve, in Bouches-du-Rhône Department of southern France.[9] The species name is in reference to the Ibero-Armorican island of the Cretaceous European Archipelago.[9]

Allodaposuchus (Agaresuchus) fontisensis ? edit

In 2016, the new genus and species Agaresuchus fontisensis was discovered and described. It was named from the Lo Hueco fossil site in Fuentes, Cuenca, Spain; fontis is the Latin name of Fuentes.[8] A. subjuniperus was then also placed into the new genus Agaresuchus.[8] However, Blanco's 2021 study has called this into question, and instead proposed that they should both be considered members of Allodaposuchus, with Agaresuchus as a junior synonym.[9]

Allodaposuchus (Lohuecosuchus) megadontos and Allodaposuchus (Lohuecosuchus) mechinorum ? edit

The genus Lohuecosuchus was named in 2015 and contained two species, L. megadontos and L. mechinorum, from Spain and southern France.[11] However, Blanco's 2021 study has called this into question, and instead proposed that they should both be considered members of Allodaposuchus, with Lohuecosuchus as a junior synonym.[9]

Classification edit

 
jaw fragments and teeth of A. palustris
 
Skeletal diagram showing known remains of A. palustris

Allodaposuchus belongs to the clade Allodaposuchidae. The exact placement of Allodaposuchidae is still in dispute. Narváez et al. considered it the sister group to Hylaeochampsidae, which together form a clade that is sister to Crocodylia.[11] Other studies have alternatively recovered them not as sister taxon, but rather as an evolutionary grade towards Crocodylia, with Hylaeochampsidae more basal than Allodaposuchidae.[12][13] Alternatively, a 2021 analysis incorporating postcranial information recovered Allodaposuchidae within Crocodylia.[14]

The internal phylogeny of Allodaposuchidae can be shown in the cladogram below from the 2021 Blanco study:[14]

Allodaposuchidae

Arenysuchus gascabadiolorum

Allodaposuchus precedens

Allodaposuchus iberoarmoricanus

Allodaposuchus subjuniperus

Allodaposuchus palustris

Allodaposuchus hulki

In the 2021 study, Blanco recovered Allodaposuchus as paraphyletic, with Agaresuchus and Lohuecosuchus. Accordingly, Blanco proposed that Agaresuchus and Lohuecosuchus should be considered junior synonyms of Allodaposuchus.[14]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Puértolas-Pascual, E.; Canudo, J.I.; Moreno-Azanza, M. (2014). "The eusuchian crocodylomorph Allodaposuchus subjuniperus sp. nov., a new species from the latest Cretaceous (upper Maastrichtian) of Spain". Historical Biology. 26 (1): 91–109. doi:10.1080/08912963.2012.763034. S2CID 85004774.
  2. ^ Martin, J.E. (2010). "Allodaposuchus Nopsca, 1928 (Crocodylia, Eusuchia), from the Late Cretaceous of southern France and its relationships to Alligatoroidea". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 30: 756–767. doi:10.1080/02724631003758318.
  3. ^ Delfino, M.; Codrea, V.; Folie, A.; Dica, P.; Godefroit, P.; Smith, T. (2008). "A complete skull of Allodaposuchus precedens Nopcsa, 1928 (Eusuchia) and a reassessment of the morphology of the taxon based on the Romanian remains". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 28: 111–122. doi:10.1671/0272-4634(2008)28[111:ACSOAP]2.0.CO;2.
  4. ^ a b Blanco, Alejandro; Fortuny, Josep; Vicente, Alba; Luján, Angel H.; García Marçà, Jordi Alexis; Sellés, Albert G. (2015). "A new species of Allodaposuchus (Eusuchia, Crocodylia) from the Maastrichtian (Late Cretaceous) of Spain: phylogenetic and paleobiological implications". PeerJ. 3:e1171: 1–35. doi:10.7717/peerj.1171. PMC 4558081. PMID 26339549.
  5. ^ Nopcsa, F (1928). "Paleontological notes on Reptilia. 7. Classification of the Crocodilia". Geologica Hungarica, Series Palaeontologica. 1: 75–84.
  6. ^ Buscalioni, A.D.; Ortega, F.; Weishampel, D.B.; Jianu, C.M. (2001). "A revision of the crocodyliform Allodaposuchus precedens from the Upper Cretaceous of the Hateg Basin, Romania. Its relevance in the phylogeny of Eusuchia". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 21: 74–86. doi:10.1671/0272-4634(2001)021[0074:AROTCA]2.0.CO;2.
  7. ^ Martin, J.E.; Buffetaut, E. (2005). "An overview of the Late Cretaceous crocodilian assemblage from Cruzy, southern France". Kaupia. 14: 33–40.
  8. ^ a b c Narváez, I.; Brochu, C.A.; Escaso, F.; Pérez-García, A.; Ortega, F. (2016). "New Spanish Late Cretaceous eusuchian reveals the synchronic and sympatric presence of two allodaposuchids". Cretaceous Research. 65: 112–125. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2016.04.018.
  9. ^ a b c d e Blanco, A. (2021). "Importance of the postcranial skeleton in eusuchian phylogeny: Reassessing the systematics of allodaposuchid crocodylians". PLOS ONE. 16 (6): e0251900. Bibcode:2021PLoSO..1651900B. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0251900. PMC 8189472. PMID 34106925.
  10. ^ Blanco, Alejandro; Puértolas Pascual, Eduardo; Marmi, Josep; Vila, Bernat; Sellés, Albert G. (2014). "Allodaposuchus palustris sp. nov. from the Upper Cretaceous of Fumanya (South Eastern Pyrenees, Iberian Peninsula): Systematics, Palaeoecology and Palaeobiogeography of the Enigmatic Allodaposuchian Crocodylians". PLoS One. 9: 1–34. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0115837. PMC 4281157.
  11. ^ a b Narváez, I.; Brochu, C.A.; Escaso, F.; Pérez-García, A.; Ortega, F. (2015). "New crocodyliforms from southwestern Europe and definition of a diverse clade of european Late Cretaceous basal eusuchians". PLOS ONE. 10 (11): e0140679. Bibcode:2015PLoSO..1040679N. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0140679. PMC 4633049. PMID 26535893.
  12. ^ Michael S. Y. Lee; Adam M. Yates (27 June 2018). "Tip-dating and homoplasy: reconciling the shallow molecular divergences of modern gharials with their long fossil". Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 285 (1881). doi:10.1098/rspb.2018.1071. PMC 6030529. PMID 30051855.
  13. ^ Rio, Jonathan P.; Mannion, Philip D. (6 September 2021). "Phylogenetic analysis of a new morphological dataset elucidates the evolutionary history of Crocodylia and resolves the long-standing gharial problem". PeerJ. 9: e12094. doi:10.7717/peerj.12094. PMC 8428266. PMID 34567843.
  14. ^ a b c Blanco, Alejandro (2021-06-09). "Importance of the postcranial skeleton in eusuchian phylogeny: Reassessing the systematics of allodaposuchid crocodylians". PLOS ONE. 16 (6): e0251900. Bibcode:2021PLoSO..1651900B. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0251900. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 8189472. PMID 34106925.

allodaposuchus, extinct, genus, crocodyliforms, that, lived, what, southern, europe, during, campanian, maastrichtian, stages, late, cretaceous, although, generally, classified, crocodylian, eusuchian, crocodylomorph, sometimes, placed, earliest, true, crocody. Allodaposuchus is an extinct genus of crocodyliforms that lived in what is now southern Europe during the Campanian and Maastrichtian stages of the Late Cretaceous Although generally classified as a non crocodylian eusuchian crocodylomorph it is sometimes placed as one of the earliest true crocodylians Allodaposuchus is one of the most common Late Cretaceous crocodylomorphs from Europe with fossils known from Romania Spain and France AllodaposuchusTemporal range Campanian Maastrichtian 84 9 66 043 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NA precedens skullScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ReptiliaClade ArchosauriaClade PseudosuchiaClade CrocodylomorphaClade CrocodyliformesClade EusuchiaClade AllodaposuchidaeGenus AllodaposuchusNopcsa 1928Type species Allodaposuchus precedensNopcsa 1928Species A precedens Nopcsa 1928 A subjuniperus Puertolas et al 2013 also Agaresuchus A palustris Blanco et al 2014 A hulki Blanco et al 2015 A iberoarmoricanus Blanco 2021 A fontisensis Narvaez et al 2016 originally Agaresuchus A megadontos Narvaez et al 2015 originally Lohuecosuchus A mechinorum Narvaez et al 2015 originally Lohuecosuchus SynonymsAgaresuchus Narvaez et al 2016 Lohuecosuchus Narvaez et al 2015 Contents 1 Description 2 History of study 2 1 Allodaposuchus precedens 2 2 Allodaposuchus Agaresuchus subjuniperus 2 3 Allodaposuchus palustris 2 4 Allodaposuchus hulki 2 5 Allodaposuchus iberoarmoricanus 2 6 Allodaposuchus Agaresuchus fontisensis 2 7 Allodaposuchus Lohuecosuchus megadontos and Allodaposuchus Lohuecosuchus mechinorum 3 Classification 4 ReferencesDescription edit nbsp Restoration of A precedensLike many other Cretaceous crocodylomorphs Allodaposuchus has a relatively small body size compared to living crocodylians The largest known specimen of Allodaposuchus belongs to an individual that was probably around 3 metres 9 8 ft long 1 Although the shape varies between species in general Allodaposuchus has a short flattened and rounded skull Allodaposuchus precedens has a brevirostrine or short snouted skull with a snout about the same length as the skull table the region of the skull behind the eye sockets and A subjuniperus has a mesorostrine or middle snouted skull with a snout that is longer than the skull table 1 2 The main feature that distinguishes Allodaposuchus species from other related crocodylomorphs is the orientation of a groove at the back of the skull called the cranioquadrate passage unlike the cranioquadrate passages of other crocodylomorphs which are only visible at the back of the skull the cranioquadrate passage of Allodaposuchus is visible when the skull is viewed from the side 3 At least one species of Allodaposuchus A hulki may have adaptations that would have allowed it to live on land for extended periods of time A hulki has large sinuses in its skull that are not seen in any other crocodylian living or extinct and may have aided it in hearing out of water as well as lightening the skull Moreover A hulki has well developed muscle attachments on its scapula humerus and ulna bones that would have allowed the forelimbs to have been held in a semi erect stance suitable for walking over land Remains of A hulki come from interbedded sandstones and marls that based on the presence of charophyte algae likely formed in ephemeral ponds in a large floodplain far from permanent bodies of water like lakes or rivers A hulki may therefore have spent much of its time out of water travelling between these ponds for food 4 History of study editWhile there are several described species of Allodaposuchus the precise membership of the group is currently disputed Allodaposuchus precedens edit The type species of Allodaposuchus A precedens was named by Hungarian paleontologist Franz Nopcsa in 1928 from Vălioara Romania 5 Nopcsa found bone fragments in a deposit of the Hațeg Basin that dates back to the late Maastrichtian stage the very end of the Late Cretaceous Several partial skulls from Spain and France were attributed to A precedens in 2001 6 Some of these skulls came from Campanian age deposits slightly older than those in Romania meaning that the species must have persisted for about 5 million years 1 A 2013 study proposed that the French and Spanish fossils assigned to A precedens in 2001 might actually represent a new unnamed species of Allodaposuchus currently identified as Allodaposuchus sp 1 A study published in 2005 had suggested that these fossils belong to several different genera of crocodylomorphs and that the original Romanian material is too fragmentary to assign to its own genus making Allodaposuchus a nomen dubium or dubious name 7 However the 2013 study reaffirmed the Romanian material s distinctiveness from other European Cretaceous crocodylomorphs and therefore reaffirmed the validity of Allodaposuchus as a genus 1 Allodaposuchus Agaresuchus subjuniperus edit In 2013 a second species of Allodaposuchus A subjuniperus was named on the basis of a skull from the late Maastrichtian Conques Formation part of the Tremp Group in the province of Huesca Spain The skull was found underneath a juniper tree whose roots had grown between the bones hence the species name subjuniperus or under juniper in Latin 1 However in 2016 A subjuniperus was moved to a new genus Agaresuchus along with the type species of that genus A fontisensis on the grounds that the Spanish species were sufficiently distinct from A precedens 8 In 2021 a phylogenetic analysis by Blanco disputed this result suggesting that both A fontisensis and A subjuniperus belong within the genus Allodaposuchus proper alongside the two species of Lohuecosuchus L megadontos and L mechinorum 9 Allodaposuchus palustris edit In 2014 A palustris was described from a partial skull and other skeletal fragments found in Maastrichtian age sediments of the Tremp Formation in a fossil locality called Fumanya Sud in the southern Pyrenees 10 These remains allowed for the first detailed description of the postcranial non skull anatomy of Allodaposuchus Allodaposuchus hulki edit A fourth species of Allodaposuchus A hulki was named in 2015 and also came from the Tremp Formation although this time in a locality called Casa Faba The species is named after the Hulk from Marvel Comics in reference to features on the bones that suggest it had strong muscles 4 Allodaposuchus iberoarmoricanus edit A palustris was described by Blanco in 2021 based on fossils discovered in Late Campanian aged fluvial deposits in Velaux La Bastide Neuve in Bouches du Rhone Department of southern France 9 The species name is in reference to the Ibero Armorican island of the Cretaceous European Archipelago 9 Allodaposuchus Agaresuchus fontisensis edit In 2016 the new genus and species Agaresuchus fontisensis was discovered and described It was named from the Lo Hueco fossil site in Fuentes Cuenca Spain fontis is the Latin name of Fuentes 8 A subjuniperus was then also placed into the new genus Agaresuchus 8 However Blanco s 2021 study has called this into question and instead proposed that they should both be considered members of Allodaposuchus with Agaresuchus as a junior synonym 9 Allodaposuchus Lohuecosuchus megadontos and Allodaposuchus Lohuecosuchus mechinorum edit The genus Lohuecosuchus was named in 2015 and contained two species L megadontos and L mechinorum from Spain and southern France 11 However Blanco s 2021 study has called this into question and instead proposed that they should both be considered members of Allodaposuchus with Lohuecosuchus as a junior synonym 9 Classification edit nbsp jaw fragments and teeth of A palustris nbsp Skeletal diagram showing known remains of A palustrisAllodaposuchus belongs to the clade Allodaposuchidae The exact placement of Allodaposuchidae is still in dispute Narvaez et al considered it the sister group to Hylaeochampsidae which together form a clade that is sister to Crocodylia 11 Other studies have alternatively recovered them not as sister taxon but rather as an evolutionary grade towards Crocodylia with Hylaeochampsidae more basal than Allodaposuchidae 12 13 Alternatively a 2021 analysis incorporating postcranial information recovered Allodaposuchidae within Crocodylia 14 Cladogram 1 Narvaez et al 2015 Eusuchia Hylaeochampsidae Allodaposuchidae Crocodylia Cladogram 2 Rio amp Mannion 2021 Eusuchia Hylaeochampsidae Allodaposuchidae Crocodylia Cladogram 3 Blanco 2021 Eusuchia Hylaeochampsidae Crocodylia GavialoideaAllodaposuchidae Brevirostres The internal phylogeny of Allodaposuchidae can be shown in the cladogram below from the 2021 Blanco study 14 Allodaposuchidae Arenysuchus gascabadiolorumAllodaposuchus precedensAllodaposuchus iberoarmoricanusAllodaposuchus subjuniperusAllodaposuchus palustrisAllodaposuchus hulkiAgaresuchus fontisensisLohuecosuchus mechinorumLohuecosuchus megadontos In the 2021 study Blanco recovered Allodaposuchus as paraphyletic with Agaresuchus and Lohuecosuchus Accordingly Blanco proposed that Agaresuchus and Lohuecosuchus should be considered junior synonyms of Allodaposuchus 14 References edit a b c d e f Puertolas Pascual E Canudo J I Moreno Azanza M 2014 The eusuchian crocodylomorph Allodaposuchus subjuniperus sp nov a new species from the latest Cretaceous upper Maastrichtian of Spain Historical Biology 26 1 91 109 doi 10 1080 08912963 2012 763034 S2CID 85004774 Martin J E 2010 Allodaposuchus Nopsca 1928 Crocodylia Eusuchia from the Late Cretaceous of southern France and its relationships to Alligatoroidea Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 30 756 767 doi 10 1080 02724631003758318 Delfino M Codrea V Folie A Dica P Godefroit P Smith T 2008 A complete skull of Allodaposuchus precedens Nopcsa 1928 Eusuchia and a reassessment of the morphology of the taxon based on the Romanian remains Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 28 111 122 doi 10 1671 0272 4634 2008 28 111 ACSOAP 2 0 CO 2 a b Blanco Alejandro Fortuny Josep Vicente Alba Lujan Angel H Garcia Marca Jordi Alexis Selles Albert G 2015 A new species of Allodaposuchus Eusuchia Crocodylia from the Maastrichtian Late Cretaceous of Spain phylogenetic and paleobiological implications PeerJ 3 e1171 1 35 doi 10 7717 peerj 1171 PMC 4558081 PMID 26339549 Nopcsa F 1928 Paleontological notes on Reptilia 7 Classification of the Crocodilia Geologica Hungarica Series Palaeontologica 1 75 84 Buscalioni A D Ortega F Weishampel D B Jianu C M 2001 A revision of the crocodyliform Allodaposuchus precedens from the Upper Cretaceous of the Hateg Basin Romania Its relevance in the phylogeny of Eusuchia Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 21 74 86 doi 10 1671 0272 4634 2001 021 0074 AROTCA 2 0 CO 2 Martin J E Buffetaut E 2005 An overview of the Late Cretaceous crocodilian assemblage from Cruzy southern France Kaupia 14 33 40 a b c Narvaez I Brochu C A Escaso F Perez Garcia A Ortega F 2016 New Spanish Late Cretaceous eusuchian reveals the synchronic and sympatric presence of two allodaposuchids Cretaceous Research 65 112 125 doi 10 1016 j cretres 2016 04 018 a b c d e Blanco A 2021 Importance of the postcranial skeleton in eusuchian phylogeny Reassessing the systematics of allodaposuchid crocodylians PLOS ONE 16 6 e0251900 Bibcode 2021PLoSO 1651900B doi 10 1371 journal pone 0251900 PMC 8189472 PMID 34106925 Blanco Alejandro Puertolas Pascual Eduardo Marmi Josep Vila Bernat Selles Albert G 2014 Allodaposuchus palustris sp nov from the Upper Cretaceous of Fumanya South Eastern Pyrenees Iberian Peninsula Systematics Palaeoecology and Palaeobiogeography of the Enigmatic Allodaposuchian Crocodylians PLoS One 9 1 34 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0115837 PMC 4281157 a b Narvaez I Brochu C A Escaso F Perez Garcia A Ortega F 2015 New crocodyliforms from southwestern Europe and definition of a diverse clade of european Late Cretaceous basal eusuchians PLOS ONE 10 11 e0140679 Bibcode 2015PLoSO 1040679N doi 10 1371 journal pone 0140679 PMC 4633049 PMID 26535893 Michael S Y Lee Adam M Yates 27 June 2018 Tip dating and homoplasy reconciling the shallow molecular divergences of modern gharials with their long fossil Proceedings of the Royal Society B 285 1881 doi 10 1098 rspb 2018 1071 PMC 6030529 PMID 30051855 Rio Jonathan P Mannion Philip D 6 September 2021 Phylogenetic analysis of a new morphological dataset elucidates the evolutionary history of Crocodylia and resolves the long standing gharial problem PeerJ 9 e12094 doi 10 7717 peerj 12094 PMC 8428266 PMID 34567843 a b c Blanco Alejandro 2021 06 09 Importance of the postcranial skeleton in eusuchian phylogeny Reassessing the systematics of allodaposuchid crocodylians PLOS ONE 16 6 e0251900 Bibcode 2021PLoSO 1651900B doi 10 1371 journal pone 0251900 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 8189472 PMID 34106925 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Allodaposuchus amp oldid 1193542796, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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