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Coelophysis

Coelophysis (/sɛˈlɒfɪsɪs/ se-lOF-iss-iss traditionally; /ˌsɛlˈfsɪs/ SEL-oh-FY-siss or /ˌslˈfsɪs/ SEE-loh-FY-siss, as heard more commonly in recent decades[3]) is a genus of coelophysid theropod dinosaur that lived approximately 215 to 208.5 million years ago during the Late Triassic period from the middle to late Norian age in what is now the southwestern United States.[4][5] Megapnosaurus was once considered to be a species within this genus,[6] but this interpretation has been challenged since 2017 and the genus Megapnosaurus is now considered valid.[7][8][9][10][11]

Coelophysis
Temporal range: Late Triassic (middle to late Norian), 215–208.5 Ma
Mounted skeleton at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Clade: Saurischia
Clade: Theropoda
Family: Coelophysidae
Genus: Coelophysis
Cope, 1889c
Type species
Coelurus bauri
Cope, 1887a
Species
  • Coelophysis bauri
    (Cope, 1887a) Cope, 1889c
Synonyms
Genus synonymy
Synonyms of C. bauri
  • Coelurus bauri
    Cope, 1887a
  • Tanystropheus bauri
    (Cope, 1887a) Cope, 1887b
  • Rioarribasaurus colberti
    Hunt & Lucas, 1991
  • Syntarsus colberti
    (Hunt & Lucas, 1991) Paul, 1993
Dubious species designations
  • Coelurus longicollis
    Cope, 1887a
  • Tanystropheus longicollis
    (Cope, 1887a) Cope, 1887b
  • Coelophysis longicollis
    (Cope, 1887a) Cope, 1889c
  • Tanystropheus willistoni
    Cope, 1887b
  • Coelophysis willistoni
    (Cope, 1887b) Cope, 1889c
  • Longosaurus longicollis
    Welles, 1984

Coelophysis was a small, slenderly-built, ground-dwelling, bipedal carnivore that could grow up to 3 m (9.8 ft) long. It is one of the earliest known dinosaur genera. Scattered material representing similar animals has been found worldwide in some Late Triassic and Early Jurassic formations.

The type species C. bauri, originally given to the genus Coelurus by Edward Drinker Cope in 1887, was described by the latter in 1889. The names Longosaurus and Rioarribasaurus are synonymous with Coelophysis. Coelophysis is one of the most specimen-rich dinosaur genera.

History of discovery edit

 
The famed Coelophysis quarry of Ghost Ranch, as it appears in 2019.

The type species of Coelophysis was originally named as a species of Coelurus.[12] Edward Drinker Cope first named Coelophysis in 1889 to name a new genus, outside of Coelurus and Tanystropheus, which C. bauri was previously classified in, for C. bauri, C. willistoni, and C. longicollis.[13] An amateur fossil collector working for Cope, David Baldwin, had found the first remains of the dinosaur in 1881 in the Chinle Formation in northwestern New Mexico.[14] Early in 1887, Cope referred the specimens collected to two new species, C. bauri and C. longicollis of the genus Coelurus. Later on in 1887, Cope reassigned the material to a yet another genus, Tanystropheus. Two years later, Cope corrected his classification after realizing differences in the vertebrae and named Coelophysis, with C. bauri as the type species,[13] which was named for Georg Baur, a comparative anatomist whose ideas were similar to Cope's.[14][15] The name Coelophysis comes from the Greek words κοῖλος/koilos (meaning 'hollow') and φύσις/physis (meaning 'form'), together "hollow form", which is a reference to its hollow vertebrae.[13][16] However, the first finds were too poorly preserved to give a complete picture of the new dinosaur. In 1947, a substantial "graveyard" of Coelophysis fossils was found by George Whitaker, the assistant of Edwin H. Colbert, in New Mexico, at Ghost Ranch, close to the original find. American Museum of Natural History paleontologist Edwin H. Colbert conducted a comprehensive study[17] of all the fossils found up to that date and assigned them to Coelophysis. The Ghost Ranch specimens were so numerous, including many well-preserved and fully articulated specimens, that one of them has since become the diagnostic, or type specimen, for the entire genus, replacing the original, poorly preserved specimen.[18]

 
Two Ghost Ranch specimens preserved together, including the neotype, AMNH

In the early 1990s, there was debate over the diagnostic characteristics of the first specimens collected, compared to the material excavated at the Ghost Ranch Coelophysis quarry. Some paleontologists were of the opinion that the original specimens were not diagnostic beyond themselves and, therefore, that the name C. bauri could not be applied to any additional specimens. They therefore applied a different name, Rioarribasaurus, to the Ghost Ranch quarry specimens.[19]

Since the numerous well-preserved Ghost Ranch specimens were used as Coelophysis in most of the scientific literature, the use of Rioarribasaurus would have been very inconvenient for researchers. So, a petition was given to have the type specimen of Coelophysis transferred from the poorly preserved original specimen to one of the well-preserved Ghost Ranch specimens. This would make Rioarribasaurus a definite synonym of Coelophysis, specifically a junior objective synonym.[12] In the end, the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) voted to make one of the Ghost Ranch samples the actual type specimen for Coelophysis and dispose of the name Rioarribasaurus altogether (declaring it a nomen rejectum, or "rejected name"), thus resolving the confusion. The name Coelophysis became a nomen conservandum ("conserved name").[18]

In a situation affecting many dinosaur taxa, some more recently discovered fossils were originally classified as new genera, but may be species of Coelophysis. For example, Prof. Mignon Talbot's 1911 discovery,[20] which she named Podokesaurus holyokensis, has long been considered to be related to Coelophysis[21] and some modern scientists consider Podokesaurus a synonym of Coelophysis.[1] Another specimen from the Portland Formation of the Hartford Basin, now at the Boston Museum of Science, has also been referred to Coelophysis.[22][23] The specimen consists of sandstone casts of a pubis, tibia, three ribs, and a possible vertebra that probably originated in a quarry in Middletown, Connecticut. However, both the type specimen of Podokesaurus and the Middletown specimen are typically considered indeterminate theropods today.[24]

Sullivan & Lucas (1999) referred one specimen from Cope's original material of Coelophysis (AMNH 2706) to what they thought was a newly discovered theropod, Eucoelophysis.[25] However, subsequent studies have shown that Eucoelophysis was misidentified and is actually a primitive, non-dinosaurian ornithodiran closely related to Silesaurus.[26]

Formerly assigned species edit

 
Snout and front teeth of C. bauri and C.? kayentakatae

"Syntarsus" rhodesiensis was first described by Raath (1969) and assigned to Podokesauridae.[27] The taxon "Podokesauridae", was abandoned because its type specimen was destroyed in a fire and can no longer be compared to new finds. Over the years, paleontologists assigned the genus to Ceratosauridae (Welles, 1984), Procompsognathidae (Parrish and Carpenter, 1986), and Ceratosauria (Gauthier, 1986). In 2004, "Syntarsus" was found to be synonymous with Coelophysis by Tykoski and Rowe (2004). Ezcurra and Novas (2007) and Ezcurra (2007) also concluded that "Syntarsus" was synonymous with Coelophysis.[28] In a phylogenetic analysis by Ezcurra (2017), Megapnosaurus was recovered in a clade with Segisaurus and Camposaurus, supporting the generic distinction of Megapnosaurus.[29] This was supported by Barta and colleagues in 2018, noting that Coelophysis still bears the vestigial 5th metacarpal, a feature absent in Megapnosaurus.[30]

The genus Syntarsus was named by Raath in 1969 for the type species Syntarsus rhodesiensis from Africa and later applied to the North American Syntarsus kayentakatae.[27] It was renamed by American entomologist Dr. Michael Ivie (Montana State University of Bozeman), Polish Australian Dr. Adam Ślipiński, and Polish Dr. Piotr Węgrzynowicz (Muzeum Ewolucji Instytutu Zoologii PAN of Warsaw), the three scientists who discovered that the genus name Syntarsus was already taken by a colydiine beetle described in 1869.[31] Many paleontologists did not like the naming of Megapnosaurus, partially because taxonomists are generally expected to allow original authors of a name to correct any mistakes in their work. Raath was aware of the homonymy between the dinosaur Syntarsus and beetle Syntarsus, but the group who published Megapnosaurus have claimed that they believed Raath was deceased and unable to correct his mistake, so they proceeded accordingly. Mortimer (2012) pointed out that "Paleontologists might have reacted more positively if the replacement name (Megapnosaurus) hadn't been facetious, translating to "big dead lizard".[32] Yates (2005) analyzed Coelophysis and Megapnosaurus and concluded that the two genera are almost identical, suggesting that Megapnosaurus was possibly synonymous with Coelophysis.[33] In 2004, Raath co-authored two papers in which he argued that Megapnosaurus (formerly Syntarsus) was a junior synonym of Coelophysis.[1] Megapnosaurus was regarded by Paul (1988) and Downs (2000) as being congeneric with Coelophysis.[34][35] In 1993, Paul then suggested that Coelophysis should be placed in Megapnosaurus (then known as Syntarsus) to get around the above-mentioned taxonomic confusion.[36] Downs (2000) examined Camposaurus and concluded that it was a junior synonym of Coelophysis because of its similarity to some of the Coelophysis Ghost Ranch specimens.[35] However, a reassessment of the Camposaurus holotype by Martin Ezcurra and Stephen Brusatte, published in 2011, revealed a pair of autapomorphies in the holotype, indicating that C. arizonensis was not a synonym of C. bauri, although it was a close relative of M. rhodesiensis.[37] Barta et al. (2018) concluded that C. bauri differed from M. rhodesiensis in that it bears its 5th metacarpal[30] and several features in the musculature of the limbs according to Griffin (2018).[38]

Description edit

 
Size of C. bauri compared to a human

Coelophysis is known from a number of complete fossil skeletons of the species C. bauri. This lightly built dinosaur measured up to 3 metres (9.8 ft) long[39] and was more than a meter tall at the hips. Gregory S. Paul (1988) estimated the weight of the gracile form at 15 kg (33 lb) and the weight of the robust form at 20 kg (44 lb),[34] but later presented a higher estimate of 25 kg (55 lb).[40] Coelophysis was a bipedal, carnivorous, theropod dinosaur and a fast, agile runner.[41] Despite its basal position within Theropoda, the bauplan of Coelophysis differed from those of other basal theropods, such as Herrerasaurus, showing more derived traits common in theropods that superseded it. The torso of Coelophysis conforms to the basic theropod bauplan, but the pectoral girdle displays some special characteristics. C. bauri had a furcula (wishbone), the earliest known example in a dinosaur. Coelophysis also preserves the ancestral condition of possessing four digits on the hand (manus). It had only three functional digits, with the fourth being embedded in the flesh of the hand.[42]

Coelophysis had narrow hips, arms adapted for grasping prey, and narrow feet.[43] Its neck and tail were long and slender.[44] The pelvis and hindlimbs of C. bauri are also slight variations on the theropod body plan. It has the open acetabulum and straight ankle hinge that define Dinosauria. The leg ended in a three-toed foot (pes) with a raised dewclaw (hallux). The tail had an unusual structure within its interlocking prezygapophysis of its vertebrae, which formed a semi-rigid lattice, apparently to stop the tail from moving up and down.[45]

 
Skull of the C. bauri neotype

Coelophysis had a long and narrow head (approximately 270 mm (0.9 ft)), with large, forward-facing eyes that afforded it stereoscopic vision and, as a result, excellent depth perception. Rinehart et al. (2004) described the complete sclerotic ring found for a juvenile Coelophysis bauri (specimen NMMNH P-4200) and compared it to data on the sclerotic rings of reptiles (including birds), concluding that Coelophysis was a diurnal, visually oriented predator.[46] The study found that the vision of Coelophysis was superior to most lizards' vision and ranked with that of modern birds of prey. The eyes of Coelophysis appear to be the closest to those of eagles and hawks, with a high power of accommodation. The data also suggested poor night vision, which would mean this dinosaur had a round pupil rather than a split pupil.[41]

Coelophysis had an elongated snout with large fenestrae that helped to reduce skull weight, while narrow struts of bones preserved the structural integrity of the skull. The neck had a pronounced sigmoid curve. The braincase is known in Coelophysis bauri, but little data could be derived because the skull was crushed.[43] Unlike some other theropods, the cranial ornamentation of Coelophysis was not located at the top of its skull. Low, laterally raised bony ridges were present on the dorsolateral margin of the nasal and lacrimal bones in the skull, directly above the antorbital fenestra.[17]

Distinguishing anatomical features edit

 
Reconstructed skeleton

A diagnosis is a statement of the anatomical features of an organism (or group) that collectively distinguish it from all other organisms. Some, but not all, of the features in a diagnosis are also autapomorphies. An autapomorphy is a distinctive anatomical feature that is unique to a given organism or group.

According to Ezcurra (2007) and Bristowe and Raath (2004), Coelophysis can be distinguished based on the absence of an offset rostral process of the maxilla, the quadrate being strongly caudally, a small external mandibular fenestra (which is 9–10% of the mandibular length[47]), and the anteroposterior length of the ventral lacrimal process is greater than 30% of its height.[48]

Several paleontologists consider Coelophysis bauri to be the same dinosaur as Megapnosaurus rhodesiensis (formerly Syntarsus). However, this has been refuted by many paleontologists. Downs (2000) concluded that C. bauri differs from C. rhodesiensis in cervical length, proximal and distal leg proportions, and proximal caudal vertebral anatomy.[35] Tykoski and Rowe (2004) concluded that C. bauri differs from M. rhodesiensis in that it lacks a pit at the base of the nasal process of the premaxilla.[43] Bristowe and Raath (2004) concluded that C. bauri differs from M. rhodesiensis in having a longer maxillary tooth row.[48] Barta et al. (2018) concluded that C. bauri differed from M. rhodesiensis in that it bears its 5th metacarpal.[30] Griffin (2018) concluded that C. bauri differs from M. rhodesiensis in several differences in the musculature of the limbs.[38]

Classification edit

 
Cast of the neotype specimen AMNH FR 7224, Redpath Museum
 
Restoration showing hypothetical wattle and feathers.
Theropod cladogram based on the phylogenetic analyses conducted by Ezcurra et al. (2020)[49].

Coelophysis is a distinct taxonomic unit (genus), composed of the single species C. bauri. Two additional originally described species, C. longicollis and C. willistoni, are now considered dubious and undiagnostic.[19] M. rhodesiensis was referred to Coelophysis for several years, but it is likely its own genus[38][30] and is known from the early Jurassic of southern Africa. A third possible species is Coelophysis kayentakatae, previously referred to the genus Megapnosaurus,[50][51] from the Kayenta Formation of the southwestern US. In recent phylogenetic analyses, "Syntarsus" kayentakatae has been shown to be distantly related to Coelophysis and Megapnosaurus, suggesting that it belongs to its own genus.[49][30][52]

Paleobiology edit

Feeding edit

 
Bones in a skeleton of C. bauri at the American Museum of Natural History, now interpreted as those of a crocodylomorph

The teeth of Coelophysis were typical of predatory dinosaurs, as they were blade-like, recurved, sharp, jagged, and finely serrated on both the anterior and posterior edges. Its dentition shows that it was carnivorous, probably preying on the small, lizard-like animals that were discovered with it.[53] It may also have hunted in packs to tackle larger prey.[34] Coelophysis bauri has approximately 26 teeth on the maxillary bone of the upper jaw and 27 teeth on the dentary bone of the lower jaw.[17] Kenneth Carpenter (2002) examined the bio-mechanics of theropod arms and attempted to evaluate their usefulness in predation. He concluded that the arm of Coelophysis was flexible and had a good range of motion, but its bone structure suggested that it was comparatively weak. The "weak" arms and small teeth in this genus suggested that Coelophysis preyed upon animals that were substantially smaller than itself. Rinehart et al. agreed that Coelophysis was a "hunter of small, fast-moving prey".[41] Carpenter also identified three distinct models of theropod arm use and noted that Coelophysis was a "combination grasper-clutcher", as compared to other dinosaurs that were "clutchers" or "long armed graspers".[54]

It has been suggested that C. bauri was a cannibal, based on supposed juvenile specimens found "within" the abdominal cavities of some Ghost Ranch specimens.[16] However, Robert J. Gay showed in 2002 that these specimens were misinterpreted. Several specimens of "juvenile coelophysids" were actually small crurotarsan reptiles, such as Hesperosuchus.[55] Gay's position was lent support in a 2006 study by Nesbitt et al.[56] In 2009, new evidence of cannibalism came to light when additional preparation of previously excavated matrix revealed regurgitate material in and around the mouth of Coelophysis specimen NMMNH P-44551. This material included tooth and jaw bone fragments that Rinehart et al. considered "morphologically identical" to a juvenile Coelophysis.[41]

In 2010, Gay examined the bones of juveniles found within the thoracic cavity of AMNH 7224 and calculated that the total volume of these bones was 17 times greater than the maximum estimated stomach volume of the Coelophysis specimen. Gay observed that the total volume would be even greater when considering that there would have been flesh on these bones. This analysis also noted the absence of tooth marks on the bones as would be expected in defleshing and the absence of expected pitting by stomach acids. Finally, Gay demonstrated that the alleged cannibalized juvenile bones were deposited stratigraphically below the larger animal that had supposedly cannibalized them. Taken together, these data suggested that the Coelophysis specimen AMNH 7224 was not a cannibal and that the bones of the juvenile and adult specimens were found in their final position as a result of "coincidental superposition of different sized individuals.[57]

Pack behavior edit

 
The Cleveland Museum of Natural History's Coelophysis block, originally American Museum of Natural History block XII collected by Colbert in 1948.[41]

The discovery of over 1,000 specimens of Coelophysis at the Whitaker quarry at Ghost Ranch has suggested gregarious behavior to researchers like Schwartz and Gillette.[58] There is a tendency to see this massive congregation of animals as evidence for huge packs of Coelophysis roaming the land.[16] No direct evidence for flocking exists because the deposits only indicate that large numbers of Coelophysis, along with various other Triassic animals, were buried together. Some of the evidence from the taphonomy of the site indicates that these animals may have been gathered together to feed or drink from a depleted water hole or to feed on a spawning run of fish, being later buried in a catastrophic flash flood[16][58] or a drought.[16]

With 30 specimens of C. rhodesiensis found together in Zimbabwe, some palaeontologists have suggested that Coelophysis was indeed gregarious. Again, there is no direct evidence of flocking in this case and it has also been suggested that these individuals were also victims of flash flooding as it appears to have been commonplace during this period.[27][59][60]

Growth and sexual dimorphism edit

Rinehart (2009) assessed the ontogenic growth of this genus using data gathered from the length of its upper leg bone (femur) and concluded that Coelophysis juveniles grew rapidly, especially during the first year of life.[41] Coelophysis likely reached sexual maturity between the second and third year of life and reached its full size, just above 10 feet in length, by its eighth year. This study identified four distinct growth stages: 1-year, 2-year, 4-year, and 7+ year.[41] It was also thought that, as soon as they were hatched, they would have to fend for themselves.[16]

Two "morphs" of Coelophysis have been identified. One is a more gracile form, as in specimen AMNH 7223, and the other is a slightly more robust form, as in specimens AMNH 7224 and NMMNH P-42200. Skeletal proportions were different between these two forms.[61] The gracile form has a longer skull, a longer neck, shorter arms, and has sacral neural spines that are fused. The robust form has a shorter skull, a shorter neck, longer arms, and unfused sacral neural spines.[17] Historically, many arguments have been made that this represents some sort of dimorphism in the population of Coelophysis, probably sexual dimorphism.[34][17][62][63] Raath agreed that dimorphism in Coelophysis is evidenced by the size and structure of the arm.[62] Rinehart et al. studied 15 individuals, and agreed that two morphs were present, even in juvenile specimens, and suggested that sexual dimorphism was present early in life, prior to sexual maturity. Rinehart concluded that the gracile form was female and the robust form was male based on differences in the sacral vertebrae of the gracile form, which allowed for greater flexibility for egg laying.[41] Further support for this position was provided by an analysis showing that each morph comprised 50% of the population, as would be expected in a 50/50 sex ratio.[64]

However, more recent research has found that C. bauri and C. rhodesiensis had highly variable growth between individuals, with some specimens being larger in their immature phase than smaller adults were when completely mature. This indicates that the supposed presence of distinct morphs is simply the result of individual variation. This highly variable growth was likely ancestral to dinosaurs but later lost and may have given such early dinosaurs an evolutionary advantage in surviving harsh environmental challenges.[65]

Reproduction edit

 
Two C. bauri casts mounted at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science

Through the compilation and analysis of a database of nearly three dozen reptiles (including birds) and comparison with existing data about the anatomy of Coelophysis, Rinehart et al. (2009) drew the following conclusions. It was estimated that average egg of Coelophysis was 31–33.5 millimeters across its minor diameter and that each female would lay between 24 and 26 eggs in each clutch. The evidence suggested that some parental care was necessary to nurture the relatively small hatchlings during the first year of life, where they would reach 1.5 meters in length by the end of their first growth stage. Coelophysis bauri invested as much energy in reproduction as other extinct reptiles of its approximate size.[41][66]

Paleopathology edit

In a 2001 study conducted by Bruce Rothschild and other paleontologists, 14-foot bones referred to Coelophysis were examined for signs of stress fracture, but none were found.[67]

In C. rhodesiensis, healed fractures of the tibia and metatarsus have been observed, but are very rare. "[T]he supporting butresses of the second sacral rib" in one specimen of Syntarsus rhodesiensis showed signs of fluctuating asymmetry. Fluctuating asymmetry results from developmental disturbances and is more common in populations under stress and can therefore be informative about the quality of conditions a dinosaur lived under.[68]

Ichnology edit

 
Grallator from Middletown, Connecticut

Edwin H. Colbert has suggested that the theropod footprints referred to the ichnogenus Grallator, located in the Connecticut River Valley across Connecticut and Massachusetts, may have been made by Coelophysis.[69] The footprints are from the Late Triassic to Early Jurassic aged Newark Supergroup. They clearly show digits II, III, and IV, but not I or V. That condition is strange for footprints of their age. The digits I and V were presumed to be stubby and ineffective, not touching the ground when the dinosaur was walking or running. They have been thought to be from an unidentified, primitive saurischian similar to Coelophysis by David B. Weishampel and L. Young more recently.[70] Skeletal remains resembling Coelophysis have also been found in the valley, supporting the idea that a species similar to Coelophysis is responsible for the footprints.[71]

Paleoenvironment edit

 
Restoration of Coelophysis and contemporary anmimals

Specimens of Coelophysis have been recovered from the Chinle Formation of New Mexico and Arizona, more famously at the Ghost Ranch (Whitaker) quarry in the Rock Point member[41] among other quarries in the underlying Petrified Forest member, the sediments of which have been dated to approximately 212 million years ago, making them part of the middle Norian stage of the Late Triassic,[72][16] but Thomas Holtz Jr. interpreted that it was during the Rhaetian stage from approximately 204 to 201.6 million years ago.[73]

C. rhodesiensis has been recovered in the Upper Elliott Formation in the Cape and Free State provinces of South Africa, as well as the Chitake River bonebed quarry at the Forest Sandstone Formation in Zimbabwe.

Ghost Ranch was located close to the equator over 200 million years ago, and had a warm, monsoon-like climate with heavy seasonal precipitation. Hayden Quarry, a new excavation site at Ghost Ranch, New Mexico, has yielded a diverse collection of fossil material that included the first evidence of dinosaurs and less-advanced dinosauromorphs from the same time period. The discovery indicates that the two groups lived together during the early Triassic period 235 million years ago.[74]

Therrien and Fastovsky (2001) examined the paleoenvironment of Coelophysis and other early theropods from Petrified Forest National Park in Arizona and determined that this genus lived in an environment that consisted of floodplains marked by distinct dry and wet seasons. There was a great deal of competition during drier times when animals struggled for water in riverbeds that were drying up.[75]

In the upper sections of the Chinle Formation where Coelophysis is found, dinosaurs were rare. So far, only Chindesaurus and Daemonosaurus[76] are known, the terrestrial fauna being dominated instead by other reptiles like the rhynchocephalian Whitakersaurus,[77] the pseudosuchian Revueltosaurus, the aetosaurs Desmatosuchus, Typothorax and Heliocanthus, the crocodilomorph Hesperosuchus, the "rauisuchians" Shuvosaurus,[78] Effigia,[79] and Vivaron,[80] along with other rare components like the dinosauriform Eucoelophysis[81] and the amniote Kraterokheirodon. In the waterways there are the phytosaur Machaeroprosopus, the archosauromorph Vancleavea, the amphibians Apachesaurus[78] and Koskinonodon,[82] and the fishes Reticulodus, Arganodus, and Lasalichthyes.[78]

Taphonomy edit

 
Specimen block, New Mexico Museum

The multitude of specimens deposited so closely together at Ghost Ranch was probably the result of a flash flood that swept away a large number of Coelophysis and buried them quickly and simultaneously. In fact, it seems that such flooding was commonplace during this period of the Earth's history and, indeed, the Petrified Forest of nearby Arizona is the result of a preserved log jam of tree trunks that were caught in one such flood. Whitaker quarry at Ghost Ranch is considered a monotaxic site because it features multiple individuals of a single taxon. The quality of preservation and the ontogenic (age) range of the specimens helped make Coelophysis one of the best known of all genera.[83] In 2009, Rinehart et al. noted that in one case the Coelophysis specimens were "washed into a topographic low containing a small pond, where they probably drowned and were buried by a sheet flood event from a nearby river."[41]

The 30 specimens of C. rhodesiensis found together in Zimbabwe was also probably the result of a flash flood that swept away a large number of Coelophysis and buried them quickly and simultaneously as well.[27][59][60]

Cultural significance edit

Coelophysis was the second dinosaur in space, following Maiasaura (STS-51-F).[84] A Coelophysis skull from the Carnegie Museum of Natural History was aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour mission STS-89 when it left the atmosphere on 22 January 1998. It was also taken onto the space station Mir before being returned to Earth.[84][85]

Being over 100 years old, Coelophysis is one of the best-known dinosaurs in literature. It was designated as the official state fossil of New Mexico in 1981 and is now the logo of the New Mexico Museum of Natural History.[12][86]

References edit

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External links edit

coelophysis, traditionally, siss, siss, heard, more, commonly, recent, decades, genus, coelophysid, theropod, dinosaur, that, lived, approximately, million, years, during, late, triassic, period, from, middle, late, norian, what, southwestern, united, states, . Coelophysis s ɛ ˈ l ɒ f ɪ s ɪ s se lOF iss iss traditionally ˌ s ɛ l oʊ ˈ f aɪ s ɪ s SEL oh FY siss or ˌ s iː l oʊ ˈ f aɪ s ɪ s SEE loh FY siss as heard more commonly in recent decades 3 is a genus of coelophysid theropod dinosaur that lived approximately 215 to 208 5 million years ago during the Late Triassic period from the middle to late Norian age in what is now the southwestern United States 4 5 Megapnosaurus was once considered to be a species within this genus 6 but this interpretation has been challenged since 2017 and the genus Megapnosaurus is now considered valid 7 8 9 10 11 CoelophysisTemporal range Late Triassic middle to late Norian 215 208 5 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NMounted skeleton at the Cleveland Museum of Natural HistoryScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClade DinosauriaClade SaurischiaClade TheropodaFamily CoelophysidaeGenus CoelophysisCope 1889cType species Coelurus bauriCope 1887aSpecies Coelophysis bauri Cope 1887a Cope 1889cSynonymsGenus synonymy Podokesaurus Talbot 1911 1 Longosaurus Welles 1984 2 Rioarribasaurus Hunt amp Lucas 1991 2 Synonyms of C bauri Coelurus bauri Cope 1887aTanystropheus bauri Cope 1887a Cope 1887bRioarribasaurus colberti Hunt amp Lucas 1991Syntarsus colberti Hunt amp Lucas 1991 Paul 1993 Dubious species designations Coelurus longicollis Cope 1887aTanystropheus longicollis Cope 1887a Cope 1887bCoelophysis longicollis Cope 1887a Cope 1889cTanystropheus willistoni Cope 1887bCoelophysis willistoni Cope 1887b Cope 1889cLongosaurus longicollis Welles 1984Coelophysis was a small slenderly built ground dwelling bipedal carnivore that could grow up to 3 m 9 8 ft long It is one of the earliest known dinosaur genera Scattered material representing similar animals has been found worldwide in some Late Triassic and Early Jurassic formations The type species C bauri originally given to the genus Coelurus by Edward Drinker Cope in 1887 was described by the latter in 1889 The names Longosaurus and Rioarribasaurus are synonymous with Coelophysis Coelophysis is one of the most specimen rich dinosaur genera Contents 1 History of discovery 1 1 Formerly assigned species 2 Description 2 1 Distinguishing anatomical features 3 Classification 4 Paleobiology 4 1 Feeding 4 2 Pack behavior 4 3 Growth and sexual dimorphism 4 4 Reproduction 4 5 Paleopathology 5 Ichnology 6 Paleoenvironment 6 1 Taphonomy 7 Cultural significance 8 References 9 External linksHistory of discovery edit nbsp The famed Coelophysis quarry of Ghost Ranch as it appears in 2019 The type species of Coelophysis was originally named as a species of Coelurus 12 Edward Drinker Cope first named Coelophysis in 1889 to name a new genus outside of Coelurus and Tanystropheus which C bauri was previously classified in for C bauri C willistoni and C longicollis 13 An amateur fossil collector working for Cope David Baldwin had found the first remains of the dinosaur in 1881 in the Chinle Formation in northwestern New Mexico 14 Early in 1887 Cope referred the specimens collected to two new species C bauri and C longicollis of the genus Coelurus Later on in 1887 Cope reassigned the material to a yet another genus Tanystropheus Two years later Cope corrected his classification after realizing differences in the vertebrae and named Coelophysis with C bauri as the type species 13 which was named for Georg Baur a comparative anatomist whose ideas were similar to Cope s 14 15 The name Coelophysis comes from the Greek words koῖlos koilos meaning hollow and fysis physis meaning form together hollow form which is a reference to its hollow vertebrae 13 16 However the first finds were too poorly preserved to give a complete picture of the new dinosaur In 1947 a substantial graveyard of Coelophysis fossils was found by George Whitaker the assistant of Edwin H Colbert in New Mexico at Ghost Ranch close to the original find American Museum of Natural History paleontologist Edwin H Colbert conducted a comprehensive study 17 of all the fossils found up to that date and assigned them to Coelophysis The Ghost Ranch specimens were so numerous including many well preserved and fully articulated specimens that one of them has since become the diagnostic or type specimen for the entire genus replacing the original poorly preserved specimen 18 nbsp Two Ghost Ranch specimens preserved together including the neotype AMNHIn the early 1990s there was debate over the diagnostic characteristics of the first specimens collected compared to the material excavated at the Ghost Ranch Coelophysis quarry Some paleontologists were of the opinion that the original specimens were not diagnostic beyond themselves and therefore that the name C bauri could not be applied to any additional specimens They therefore applied a different name Rioarribasaurus to the Ghost Ranch quarry specimens 19 Since the numerous well preserved Ghost Ranch specimens were used as Coelophysis in most of the scientific literature the use of Rioarribasaurus would have been very inconvenient for researchers So a petition was given to have the type specimen of Coelophysis transferred from the poorly preserved original specimen to one of the well preserved Ghost Ranch specimens This would make Rioarribasaurus a definite synonym of Coelophysis specifically a junior objective synonym 12 In the end the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature ICZN voted to make one of the Ghost Ranch samples the actual type specimen for Coelophysis and dispose of the name Rioarribasaurus altogether declaring it a nomen rejectum or rejected name thus resolving the confusion The name Coelophysis became a nomen conservandum conserved name 18 In a situation affecting many dinosaur taxa some more recently discovered fossils were originally classified as new genera but may be species of Coelophysis For example Prof Mignon Talbot s 1911 discovery 20 which she named Podokesaurus holyokensis has long been considered to be related to Coelophysis 21 and some modern scientists consider Podokesaurus a synonym of Coelophysis 1 Another specimen from the Portland Formation of the Hartford Basin now at the Boston Museum of Science has also been referred to Coelophysis 22 23 The specimen consists of sandstone casts of a pubis tibia three ribs and a possible vertebra that probably originated in a quarry in Middletown Connecticut However both the type specimen of Podokesaurus and the Middletown specimen are typically considered indeterminate theropods today 24 Sullivan amp Lucas 1999 referred one specimen from Cope s original material of Coelophysis AMNH 2706 to what they thought was a newly discovered theropod Eucoelophysis 25 However subsequent studies have shown that Eucoelophysis was misidentified and is actually a primitive non dinosaurian ornithodiran closely related to Silesaurus 26 Formerly assigned species edit nbsp Snout and front teeth of C bauri and C kayentakatae Syntarsus rhodesiensis was first described by Raath 1969 and assigned to Podokesauridae 27 The taxon Podokesauridae was abandoned because its type specimen was destroyed in a fire and can no longer be compared to new finds Over the years paleontologists assigned the genus to Ceratosauridae Welles 1984 Procompsognathidae Parrish and Carpenter 1986 and Ceratosauria Gauthier 1986 In 2004 Syntarsus was found to be synonymous with Coelophysis by Tykoski and Rowe 2004 Ezcurra and Novas 2007 and Ezcurra 2007 also concluded that Syntarsus was synonymous with Coelophysis 28 In a phylogenetic analysis by Ezcurra 2017 Megapnosaurus was recovered in a clade with Segisaurus and Camposaurus supporting the generic distinction of Megapnosaurus 29 This was supported by Barta and colleagues in 2018 noting that Coelophysis still bears the vestigial 5th metacarpal a feature absent in Megapnosaurus 30 The genus Syntarsus was named by Raath in 1969 for the type species Syntarsus rhodesiensis from Africa and later applied to the North American Syntarsus kayentakatae 27 It was renamed by American entomologist Dr Michael Ivie Montana State University of Bozeman Polish Australian Dr Adam Slipinski and Polish Dr Piotr Wegrzynowicz Muzeum Ewolucji Instytutu Zoologii PAN of Warsaw the three scientists who discovered that the genus name Syntarsus was already taken by a colydiine beetle described in 1869 31 Many paleontologists did not like the naming of Megapnosaurus partially because taxonomists are generally expected to allow original authors of a name to correct any mistakes in their work Raath was aware of the homonymy between the dinosaur Syntarsus and beetle Syntarsus but the group who published Megapnosaurus have claimed that they believed Raath was deceased and unable to correct his mistake so they proceeded accordingly Mortimer 2012 pointed out that Paleontologists might have reacted more positively if the replacement name Megapnosaurus hadn t been facetious translating to big dead lizard 32 Yates 2005 analyzed Coelophysis and Megapnosaurus and concluded that the two genera are almost identical suggesting that Megapnosaurus was possibly synonymous with Coelophysis 33 In 2004 Raath co authored two papers in which he argued that Megapnosaurus formerly Syntarsus was a junior synonym of Coelophysis 1 Megapnosaurus was regarded by Paul 1988 and Downs 2000 as being congeneric with Coelophysis 34 35 In 1993 Paul then suggested that Coelophysis should be placed in Megapnosaurus then known as Syntarsus to get around the above mentioned taxonomic confusion 36 Downs 2000 examined Camposaurus and concluded that it was a junior synonym of Coelophysis because of its similarity to some of the Coelophysis Ghost Ranch specimens 35 However a reassessment of the Camposaurus holotype by Martin Ezcurra and Stephen Brusatte published in 2011 revealed a pair of autapomorphies in the holotype indicating that C arizonensis was not a synonym of C bauri although it was a close relative of M rhodesiensis 37 Barta et al 2018 concluded that C bauri differed from M rhodesiensis in that it bears its 5th metacarpal 30 and several features in the musculature of the limbs according to Griffin 2018 38 Description edit nbsp Size of C bauri compared to a humanCoelophysis is known from a number of complete fossil skeletons of the species C bauri This lightly built dinosaur measured up to 3 metres 9 8 ft long 39 and was more than a meter tall at the hips Gregory S Paul 1988 estimated the weight of the gracile form at 15 kg 33 lb and the weight of the robust form at 20 kg 44 lb 34 but later presented a higher estimate of 25 kg 55 lb 40 Coelophysis was a bipedal carnivorous theropod dinosaur and a fast agile runner 41 Despite its basal position within Theropoda the bauplan of Coelophysis differed from those of other basal theropods such as Herrerasaurus showing more derived traits common in theropods that superseded it The torso of Coelophysis conforms to the basic theropod bauplan but the pectoral girdle displays some special characteristics C bauri had a furcula wishbone the earliest known example in a dinosaur Coelophysis also preserves the ancestral condition of possessing four digits on the hand manus It had only three functional digits with the fourth being embedded in the flesh of the hand 42 Coelophysis had narrow hips arms adapted for grasping prey and narrow feet 43 Its neck and tail were long and slender 44 The pelvis and hindlimbs of C bauri are also slight variations on the theropod body plan It has the open acetabulum and straight ankle hinge that define Dinosauria The leg ended in a three toed foot pes with a raised dewclaw hallux The tail had an unusual structure within its interlocking prezygapophysis of its vertebrae which formed a semi rigid lattice apparently to stop the tail from moving up and down 45 nbsp Skull of the C bauri neotypeCoelophysis had a long and narrow head approximately 270 mm 0 9 ft with large forward facing eyes that afforded it stereoscopic vision and as a result excellent depth perception Rinehart et al 2004 described the complete sclerotic ring found for a juvenile Coelophysis bauri specimen NMMNH P 4200 and compared it to data on the sclerotic rings of reptiles including birds concluding that Coelophysis was a diurnal visually oriented predator 46 The study found that the vision of Coelophysis was superior to most lizards vision and ranked with that of modern birds of prey The eyes of Coelophysis appear to be the closest to those of eagles and hawks with a high power of accommodation The data also suggested poor night vision which would mean this dinosaur had a round pupil rather than a split pupil 41 Coelophysis had an elongated snout with large fenestrae that helped to reduce skull weight while narrow struts of bones preserved the structural integrity of the skull The neck had a pronounced sigmoid curve The braincase is known in Coelophysis bauri but little data could be derived because the skull was crushed 43 Unlike some other theropods the cranial ornamentation of Coelophysis was not located at the top of its skull Low laterally raised bony ridges were present on the dorsolateral margin of the nasal and lacrimal bones in the skull directly above the antorbital fenestra 17 Distinguishing anatomical features edit nbsp Reconstructed skeletonA diagnosis is a statement of the anatomical features of an organism or group that collectively distinguish it from all other organisms Some but not all of the features in a diagnosis are also autapomorphies An autapomorphy is a distinctive anatomical feature that is unique to a given organism or group According to Ezcurra 2007 and Bristowe and Raath 2004 Coelophysis can be distinguished based on the absence of an offset rostral process of the maxilla the quadrate being strongly caudally a small external mandibular fenestra which is 9 10 of the mandibular length 47 and the anteroposterior length of the ventral lacrimal process is greater than 30 of its height 48 Several paleontologists consider Coelophysis bauri to be the same dinosaur as Megapnosaurus rhodesiensis formerly Syntarsus However this has been refuted by many paleontologists Downs 2000 concluded that C bauri differs from C rhodesiensis in cervical length proximal and distal leg proportions and proximal caudal vertebral anatomy 35 Tykoski and Rowe 2004 concluded that C bauri differs from M rhodesiensis in that it lacks a pit at the base of the nasal process of the premaxilla 43 Bristowe and Raath 2004 concluded that C bauri differs from M rhodesiensis in having a longer maxillary tooth row 48 Barta et al 2018 concluded that C bauri differed from M rhodesiensis in that it bears its 5th metacarpal 30 Griffin 2018 concluded that C bauri differs from M rhodesiensis in several differences in the musculature of the limbs 38 Classification edit nbsp Cast of the neotype specimen AMNH FR 7224 Redpath Museum nbsp Restoration showing hypothetical wattle and feathers Theropoda Tawa hallaeChindesaurusEodromaeusNeotheropoda Coelophysoidea LiliensternusDracoraptor Syntarsus kayentakataePanguraptorPowellvenatorProcompsognathusCoelophysisLepidusCamposaurusLucianovenatorMegapnosaurusSegisaurusZupaysaurusGojirasaurusCryolophosaurusDilophosaurusSarcosaurusTachiraptorAverostra Theropod cladogram based on the phylogenetic analyses conducted by Ezcurra et al 2020 49 Coelophysis is a distinct taxonomic unit genus composed of the single species C bauri Two additional originally described species C longicollis and C willistoni are now considered dubious and undiagnostic 19 M rhodesiensis was referred to Coelophysis for several years but it is likely its own genus 38 30 and is known from the early Jurassic of southern Africa A third possible species is Coelophysis kayentakatae previously referred to the genus Megapnosaurus 50 51 from the Kayenta Formation of the southwestern US In recent phylogenetic analyses Syntarsus kayentakatae has been shown to be distantly related to Coelophysis and Megapnosaurus suggesting that it belongs to its own genus 49 30 52 Paleobiology editFeeding edit nbsp Bones in a skeleton of C bauri at the American Museum of Natural History now interpreted as those of a crocodylomorphThe teeth of Coelophysis were typical of predatory dinosaurs as they were blade like recurved sharp jagged and finely serrated on both the anterior and posterior edges Its dentition shows that it was carnivorous probably preying on the small lizard like animals that were discovered with it 53 It may also have hunted in packs to tackle larger prey 34 Coelophysis bauri has approximately 26 teeth on the maxillary bone of the upper jaw and 27 teeth on the dentary bone of the lower jaw 17 Kenneth Carpenter 2002 examined the bio mechanics of theropod arms and attempted to evaluate their usefulness in predation He concluded that the arm of Coelophysis was flexible and had a good range of motion but its bone structure suggested that it was comparatively weak The weak arms and small teeth in this genus suggested that Coelophysis preyed upon animals that were substantially smaller than itself Rinehart et al agreed that Coelophysis was a hunter of small fast moving prey 41 Carpenter also identified three distinct models of theropod arm use and noted that Coelophysis was a combination grasper clutcher as compared to other dinosaurs that were clutchers or long armed graspers 54 It has been suggested that C bauri was a cannibal based on supposed juvenile specimens found within the abdominal cavities of some Ghost Ranch specimens 16 However Robert J Gay showed in 2002 that these specimens were misinterpreted Several specimens of juvenile coelophysids were actually small crurotarsan reptiles such as Hesperosuchus 55 Gay s position was lent support in a 2006 study by Nesbitt et al 56 In 2009 new evidence of cannibalism came to light when additional preparation of previously excavated matrix revealed regurgitate material in and around the mouth of Coelophysis specimen NMMNH P 44551 This material included tooth and jaw bone fragments that Rinehart et al considered morphologically identical to a juvenile Coelophysis 41 In 2010 Gay examined the bones of juveniles found within the thoracic cavity of AMNH 7224 and calculated that the total volume of these bones was 17 times greater than the maximum estimated stomach volume of the Coelophysis specimen Gay observed that the total volume would be even greater when considering that there would have been flesh on these bones This analysis also noted the absence of tooth marks on the bones as would be expected in defleshing and the absence of expected pitting by stomach acids Finally Gay demonstrated that the alleged cannibalized juvenile bones were deposited stratigraphically below the larger animal that had supposedly cannibalized them Taken together these data suggested that the Coelophysis specimen AMNH 7224 was not a cannibal and that the bones of the juvenile and adult specimens were found in their final position as a result of coincidental superposition of different sized individuals 57 Pack behavior edit nbsp The Cleveland Museum of Natural History s Coelophysis block originally American Museum of Natural History block XII collected by Colbert in 1948 41 The discovery of over 1 000 specimens of Coelophysis at the Whitaker quarry at Ghost Ranch has suggested gregarious behavior to researchers like Schwartz and Gillette 58 There is a tendency to see this massive congregation of animals as evidence for huge packs of Coelophysis roaming the land 16 No direct evidence for flocking exists because the deposits only indicate that large numbers of Coelophysis along with various other Triassic animals were buried together Some of the evidence from the taphonomy of the site indicates that these animals may have been gathered together to feed or drink from a depleted water hole or to feed on a spawning run of fish being later buried in a catastrophic flash flood 16 58 or a drought 16 With 30 specimens of C rhodesiensis found together in Zimbabwe some palaeontologists have suggested that Coelophysis was indeed gregarious Again there is no direct evidence of flocking in this case and it has also been suggested that these individuals were also victims of flash flooding as it appears to have been commonplace during this period 27 59 60 Growth and sexual dimorphism edit Rinehart 2009 assessed the ontogenic growth of this genus using data gathered from the length of its upper leg bone femur and concluded that Coelophysis juveniles grew rapidly especially during the first year of life 41 Coelophysis likely reached sexual maturity between the second and third year of life and reached its full size just above 10 feet in length by its eighth year This study identified four distinct growth stages 1 year 2 year 4 year and 7 year 41 It was also thought that as soon as they were hatched they would have to fend for themselves 16 Two morphs of Coelophysis have been identified One is a more gracile form as in specimen AMNH 7223 and the other is a slightly more robust form as in specimens AMNH 7224 and NMMNH P 42200 Skeletal proportions were different between these two forms 61 The gracile form has a longer skull a longer neck shorter arms and has sacral neural spines that are fused The robust form has a shorter skull a shorter neck longer arms and unfused sacral neural spines 17 Historically many arguments have been made that this represents some sort of dimorphism in the population of Coelophysis probably sexual dimorphism 34 17 62 63 Raath agreed that dimorphism in Coelophysis is evidenced by the size and structure of the arm 62 Rinehart et al studied 15 individuals and agreed that two morphs were present even in juvenile specimens and suggested that sexual dimorphism was present early in life prior to sexual maturity Rinehart concluded that the gracile form was female and the robust form was male based on differences in the sacral vertebrae of the gracile form which allowed for greater flexibility for egg laying 41 Further support for this position was provided by an analysis showing that each morph comprised 50 of the population as would be expected in a 50 50 sex ratio 64 However more recent research has found that C bauri and C rhodesiensis had highly variable growth between individuals with some specimens being larger in their immature phase than smaller adults were when completely mature This indicates that the supposed presence of distinct morphs is simply the result of individual variation This highly variable growth was likely ancestral to dinosaurs but later lost and may have given such early dinosaurs an evolutionary advantage in surviving harsh environmental challenges 65 Reproduction edit nbsp Two C bauri casts mounted at the Denver Museum of Nature and ScienceThrough the compilation and analysis of a database of nearly three dozen reptiles including birds and comparison with existing data about the anatomy of Coelophysis Rinehart et al 2009 drew the following conclusions It was estimated that average egg of Coelophysis was 31 33 5 millimeters across its minor diameter and that each female would lay between 24 and 26 eggs in each clutch The evidence suggested that some parental care was necessary to nurture the relatively small hatchlings during the first year of life where they would reach 1 5 meters in length by the end of their first growth stage Coelophysis bauri invested as much energy in reproduction as other extinct reptiles of its approximate size 41 66 Paleopathology edit In a 2001 study conducted by Bruce Rothschild and other paleontologists 14 foot bones referred to Coelophysis were examined for signs of stress fracture but none were found 67 In C rhodesiensis healed fractures of the tibia and metatarsus have been observed but are very rare T he supporting butresses of the second sacral rib in one specimen of Syntarsus rhodesiensis showed signs of fluctuating asymmetry Fluctuating asymmetry results from developmental disturbances and is more common in populations under stress and can therefore be informative about the quality of conditions a dinosaur lived under 68 Ichnology edit nbsp Grallator from Middletown ConnecticutEdwin H Colbert has suggested that the theropod footprints referred to the ichnogenus Grallator located in the Connecticut River Valley across Connecticut and Massachusetts may have been made by Coelophysis 69 The footprints are from the Late Triassic to Early Jurassic aged Newark Supergroup They clearly show digits II III and IV but not I or V That condition is strange for footprints of their age The digits I and V were presumed to be stubby and ineffective not touching the ground when the dinosaur was walking or running They have been thought to be from an unidentified primitive saurischian similar to Coelophysis by David B Weishampel and L Young more recently 70 Skeletal remains resembling Coelophysis have also been found in the valley supporting the idea that a species similar to Coelophysis is responsible for the footprints 71 Paleoenvironment edit nbsp Restoration of Coelophysis and contemporary anmimalsSpecimens of Coelophysis have been recovered from the Chinle Formation of New Mexico and Arizona more famously at the Ghost Ranch Whitaker quarry in the Rock Point member 41 among other quarries in the underlying Petrified Forest member the sediments of which have been dated to approximately 212 million years ago making them part of the middle Norian stage of the Late Triassic 72 16 but Thomas Holtz Jr interpreted that it was during the Rhaetian stage from approximately 204 to 201 6 million years ago 73 C rhodesiensis has been recovered in the Upper Elliott Formation in the Cape and Free State provinces of South Africa as well as the Chitake River bonebed quarry at the Forest Sandstone Formation in Zimbabwe Ghost Ranch was located close to the equator over 200 million years ago and had a warm monsoon like climate with heavy seasonal precipitation Hayden Quarry a new excavation site at Ghost Ranch New Mexico has yielded a diverse collection of fossil material that included the first evidence of dinosaurs and less advanced dinosauromorphs from the same time period The discovery indicates that the two groups lived together during the early Triassic period 235 million years ago 74 Therrien and Fastovsky 2001 examined the paleoenvironment of Coelophysis and other early theropods from Petrified Forest National Park in Arizona and determined that this genus lived in an environment that consisted of floodplains marked by distinct dry and wet seasons There was a great deal of competition during drier times when animals struggled for water in riverbeds that were drying up 75 In the upper sections of the Chinle Formation where Coelophysis is found dinosaurs were rare So far only Chindesaurus and Daemonosaurus 76 are known the terrestrial fauna being dominated instead by other reptiles like the rhynchocephalian Whitakersaurus 77 the pseudosuchian Revueltosaurus the aetosaurs Desmatosuchus Typothorax and Heliocanthus the crocodilomorph Hesperosuchus the rauisuchians Shuvosaurus 78 Effigia 79 and Vivaron 80 along with other rare components like the dinosauriform Eucoelophysis 81 and the amniote Kraterokheirodon In the waterways there are the phytosaur Machaeroprosopus the archosauromorph Vancleavea the amphibians Apachesaurus 78 and Koskinonodon 82 and the fishes Reticulodus Arganodus and Lasalichthyes 78 Taphonomy edit nbsp Specimen block New Mexico MuseumThe multitude of specimens deposited so closely together at Ghost Ranch was probably the result of a flash flood that swept away a large number of Coelophysis and buried them quickly and simultaneously In fact it seems that such flooding was commonplace during this period of the Earth s history and indeed the Petrified Forest of nearby Arizona is the result of a preserved log jam of tree trunks that were caught in one such flood Whitaker quarry at Ghost Ranch is considered a monotaxic site because it features multiple individuals of a single taxon The quality of preservation and the ontogenic age range of the specimens helped make Coelophysis one of the best known of all genera 83 In 2009 Rinehart et al noted that in one case the Coelophysis specimens were washed into a topographic low containing a small pond where they probably drowned and were buried by a sheet flood event from a nearby river 41 The 30 specimens of C rhodesiensis found together in Zimbabwe was also probably the result of a flash flood that swept away a large number of Coelophysis and buried them quickly and simultaneously as well 27 59 60 Cultural significance editCoelophysis was the second dinosaur in space following Maiasaura STS 51 F 84 A Coelophysis skull from the Carnegie Museum of Natural History was aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour mission STS 89 when it left the atmosphere on 22 January 1998 It was also taken onto the space station Mir before being returned to Earth 84 85 Being over 100 years old Coelophysis is one of the best known dinosaurs in literature It was designated as the official state fossil of New Mexico in 1981 and is now the logo of the New Mexico Museum of Natural History 12 86 References edit a b c Bristowe A M A Raath 2004 A juvenile coelophysoid skull from the Early Jurassic of Zimbabwe and the synonymy of Coelophysis and Syntarsus USA Palaeontologica Africana 40 40 31 41 a b Carrano Matthew T Benson Roger B J Sampson Scott D 2012 The phylogeny of Tetanurae Dinosauria Theropoda Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 10 2 211 300 doi 10 1080 14772019 2011 630927 S2CID 85354215 RE Afrovenator pronunciation dml cmnh org Archived from the original on 24 February 2012 Retrieved 26 May 2019 Irmis Randall B Mundil Roland Martz Jeffrey W Parker William G 15 September 2011 High resolution U Pb ages from the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation New Mexico USA support a diachronous rise of dinosaurs Earth and Planetary Science Letters 309 3 4 258 267 Bibcode 2011E amp PSL 309 258I doi 10 1016 j epsl 2011 07 015 Martinez R N Apaldetti C 2017 A late Norian Rhaetian coelophysid neotheropod Dinosauria Saurischia from the Quebrada del Barro Formation northwestern Argentina Ameghiniana 54 5 488 505 doi 10 5710 AMGH 09 04 2017 3065 Weishampel David B et al 2004 Dinosaur distribution Early Jurassic Africa In Weishampel David B Dodson Peter and Osmolska Halszka eds The Dinosauria 2nd Berkeley University of California Press Pp 535 536 ISBN 0 520 24209 2 Spiekman S N Ezcurra M D Butler R J Fraser N C Maidment S C 2021 Pendraig milnerae a new small sized coelophysoid theropod from the Late Triassic of Wales Royal Society Open Science 8 10 210915 Bibcode 2021RSOS 810915S doi 10 1098 rsos 210915 PMC 8493203 PMID 34754500 Martinez R N Apaldetti C 2017 A Late Norian Rhaetian Coelophysid Neotheropod Dinosauria Saurischia from the Quebrada Del Barro Formation Northwestern Argentina Ameghiniana 54 5 488 505 doi 10 5710 AMGH 09 04 2017 3065 S2CID 133341745 Barta D E Nesbitt S J Norell M A 2018 The evolution of the manus of early theropod dinosaurs is characterized by high inter and intraspecific variation Journal of Anatomy 232 1 80 104 doi 10 1111 joa 12719 PMC 5735062 PMID 29114853 Tolchard F Nesbitt S J Desojo J B Viglietti P Butler R J Choiniere J N 2019 Rauisuchian material from the lower Elliot Formation of South Africa and Lesotho Implications for Late Triassic biogeography and biostratigraphy Journal of African Earth Sciences 160 103610 Bibcode 2019JAfES 16003610T doi 10 1016 j jafrearsci 2019 103610 S2CID 202902771 Ezcurra Martin D Butler Richard J Maidment Susannah C R Sansom Ivan J Meade Luke E Radley Jonathan D 1 January 2021 A revision of the early neotheropod genus Sarcosaurus from the Early Jurassic Hettangian Sinemurian of central England Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 191 1 113 149 doi 10 1093 zoolinnean zlaa054 hdl 11336 160038 ISSN 0024 4082 a b c Colbert E H Charig A J Dodson P Gillette D D Ostrom J H Weishampel D B 1992 Coelurus bauri Cope 1887 currently Coelophysis bauri Reptilia Saurischia Proposed replacement of the lectotype by a neotype PDF Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 49 4 276 279 a b c Cope E D 1889 On a new genus of Triassic Dinosauria The American Naturalist 23 271 621 633 doi 10 1086 274979 a b Glut D F 1999 Dinosaurs the Encyclopedia Supplement 1 McFarland amp Company Inc p 442 ISBN 978 0 7864 0591 6 Cope E D 1887 The Dinosaurian Genus Coelurus The American Naturalist xxi 5 367 369 a b c d e f g Haines T Chambers P 2007 The Complete Guide to Prehistoric Life Firefly Books pp 70 71 ISBN 978 1 55407 181 4 a b c d e Colbert E 1989 The Triassic Dinosaur Coelophysis Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin 57 160 a b International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature 1996 Opinion 1842 Coelurus bauri Cope 1887 currently Coelophysis bauri Reptilia Saurischia lectotype replaced by a neotype PDF Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 53 2 142 144 a b Hunt Adrian P Lucas Spencer G 1991 Rioarribasaurus a new name for a Late Triassic dinosaur from New Mexico USA Palaontologische Zeitschrift 65 1 2 191 198 doi 10 1007 bf02985783 S2CID 129577216 Talbot M 1911 Podokesaurus holyokensis a new dinosaur from the Triassic of the Connecticut Valley American Journal of Science 4 31 186 469 479 Bibcode 1911AmJS 31 469T doi 10 2475 ajs s4 31 186 469 Colbert E 1964 The Triassic dinosaur genera Podokesaurus and Coelophysis American Museum Novitates 2168 1 12 Colbert E Baird D 1958 Coelurosaur bone casts from the Connecticut Valley Triassic American Museum Novitates 1901 1 11 Getty P R Bush A M 2011 Sand pseudomorphs of dinosaur bones Implications for non preservation of tetrapod skeletal material in the Hartford Basin USA Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 302 3 4 407 414 Bibcode 2011PPP 302 407G doi 10 1016 j palaeo 2011 01 029 Olshevsky G 1991 A revision of the parainfraclass Archosauria Cope 1869 excluding the advanced Crocodylia PDF Mesozoic Meanderings 2 196 Sullivan Robert M Lucas Spencer G 1999 Eucoelophysis baldwini a new theropod dinosaur from the Upper Triassic of New Mexico and the status of the original types of Coelophysis Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 19 1 81 90 doi 10 1080 02724634 1999 10011124 Nesbitt Sterling J Irmis Randall B Parker William G 2007 A critical re evaluation of the Late Triassic dinosaur taxa of North America Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 5 2 209 243 doi 10 1017 S1477201907002040 S2CID 28782207 a b c d Raath 1969 A new Coelurosaurian dinosaur from the Forest Sandstone of Rhodesia Arnoldia Rhodesia 4 28 1 25 Tykoski R S and Rowe T 2004 Ceratosauria Chapter Three In The Dinosauria Second Edition edited by Weishampel D B Dodson P and Osmolska H California University Press p 47 70 Ezcurra Martin D 14 August 2017 A New Early Coelophysoid Neotheropod from the Late Triassic of Northwestern Argentina Ameghiniana 54 5 506 doi 10 5710 AMGH 04 08 2017 3100 ISSN 0002 7014 S2CID 135096489 a b c d e Barta Daniel E Nesbitt Sterling J Norell Mark A 2018 The evolution of the manus of early theropod dinosaurs is characterized by high inter and intraspecific variation Journal of Anatomy 232 1 80 104 doi 10 1111 joa 12719 PMC 5735062 PMID 29114853 Ivie M A Slipinski S A Wegrzynowicz P 2001 Generic homonyms in the Colydiinae Coleoptera Zopheridae Insecta Mundi 15 63 64 Mortimer Mickey 2012 Coelophysoidea Archived from the original on 4 May 2013 Yates A M 2005 A new theropod dinosaur from the Early Jurassic of South Africa and its implications for the early evolution of theropods Palaeontologia Africana 41 105 122 a b c d Paul Gregory S 1988 Predatory Dinosaurs of the World Simon amp Schuster p 260 ISBN 978 0 671 61946 6 a b c Downs A 2000 Coelophysis bauri and Syntarsus rhodesiensis compared with comments on the preparation and preservation of fossils from the Ghost Ranch Coelophysis quarry In Lucas S G Heckert A B eds Dinosaurs of New Mexico New Mexico Museum of Natural History Bulletin 17 33 37 Paul G S 1993 Are Syntarsus and the Whitetaker theropod the same genus In Lucas S G Morales M eds The Nonmarine Triassic New Mexico Museum of Natural History Bulletin 3 397 402 Ezcurra M D Brusatte S L 2011 Taxonomic and phylogenetic reassessment of the early neotheropod dinosaur Camposaurus arizonensis from the Late Triassic of North America Palaeontology 54 4 763 772 doi 10 1111 j 1475 4983 2011 01069 x a b c Griffin Christopher 2018 Developmental patterns and variation among early theropods Journal of Anatomy 232 604 640 10 1111 joa 12775 Schwartz Hilde L Gillette David D 1994 Geology and taphonomy of the Coelophysis quarry Upper Triassic Chinle Formation Ghost Ranch New Mexico Journal of Paleontology 68 5 1118 1130 doi 10 1017 S0022336000026718 JSTOR 1306181 S2CID 130635216 Paul Gregory S 2010 Theropods The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs Princeton Princeton University Press pp 67 162 doi 10 1515 9781400836154 67b ISBN 978 1 4008 3615 4 a b c d e f g h i j k Rinehart L F Lucas S G Heckert A B Spielmann J A Celesky M D 2009 The paleobiology of Coelophysis bauri Cope from the Upper Triassic Apachean Whitaker quarry New Mexico with detailed analysis of a single quarry block New Mexico Museum of Natural History amp Science A Division of the Department of Cultural Affairs Bulletin 45 260 Rinehart Larry F Lucas Spencer G Hunt Adrian P 2007 Furculae in the Late Triassic theropod dinosaur Coelophysis bauri Palaontologische Zeitschrift 81 2 174 180 doi 10 1007 bf02988391 S2CID 129076419 a b c Tykoski R S amp Rowe T 2004 Ceratosauria In Weishampel D B Dodson P Osmolska H eds 6 November 2004 The Dinosauria Second ed Berkeley University of California Press pp 47 70 ISBN 978 0 520 24209 8 Gaines Richard M 2001 Coelophysis ABDO Publishing Company p 4 ISBN 978 1 57765 488 9 Gay R J 2001 An unusual adaptation in the caudal vertebrae of Coelophysis bauri Dinosauria Theropoda PaleoBios 21 55 Rinehart L F Heckert A B Lucas S G Hunt A P 2004 The sclerotic ring of the Late Triassic theropod dinosaur Coelophysis New Mexico Geological Society Spring Meeting 26 64 Ezcurra M D 2007 The cranial anatomy of the coelophysoid theropod Zupaysaurus rougieri from the Upper Triassic of Argentina Historical Biology 19 2 185 202 doi 10 1080 08912960600861467 S2CID 129449572 a b Bristowe A Raath M A 2004 A juvenile coelophysoid skull from the Early Jurassic of Zimbabwe and the synonymy of Coelophysis and Syntarsus PDF Palaeontologia Africana 40 31 41 ISSN 0078 8554 a b Ezcurra Martin amp Butler Richard amp Maidment Susannah amp Sansom Ivan amp Meade Luke amp Radley Jonathan 2020 A revision of the early neotheropod genus Sarcosaurus from the Early Jurassic Hettangian Sinemurian of central England Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 191 10 1093 zoolinnean zlaa054 Coelophysoidea theropoddatabase com Retrieved 5 February 2016 Facial variation in Coelophysis bauri and the status of Megapnosaurus Syntarsus nmstatefossil org Retrieved 5 February 2016 Marsh Adam D Rowe Timothy B July 2020 A comprehensive anatomical and phylogenetic evaluation of Dilophosaurus wetherilli Dinosauria Theropoda with descriptions of new specimens from the Kayenta Formation of northern Arizona Journal of Paleontology 94 S78 1 103 doi 10 1017 jpa 2020 14 ISSN 0022 3360 S2CID 220601744 Benton M 1993 Dinosaur and other prehistoric animal Fact Finder Kingfisher Books Ldt p 256 ISBN 978 0 86272 949 3 Carpenter K 2002 Forelimb bio mechanics of non avian theropod dinosaurs in predation Senckenbergiana Lethaea 82 59 76 doi 10 1007 bf03043773 S2CID 84702973 Gay R J 2002 The myth of cannibalism in Coelophysis bauri Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 22 3 57A Nesbitt S J Turner A H Erickson G M Norell M A 2006 Prey choice and cannibalistic behaviour in the theropod Coelophysis Biology Letters 22 2 4 611 614 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2006 0524 PMC 1834007 PMID 17148302 Gay R J 2010a Notes on Early Mesozoic Theropods First ed Lulu press pp 9 24 ISBN 978 0 557 46616 0 a b Schwartz H L Gillette D D 1994 Geology and taphonomy of the Coelophysis quarry Upper Triassic Chinle Formation Ghost Ranch New Mexico Journal of Paleontology 68 5 1118 1130 doi 10 1017 S0022336000026718 JSTOR 1306181 S2CID 130635216 a b G Bond 1965 Some new fossil localities in the Karroo System of Rhodesia Arnoldia Series of Miscellaneous Publications National Museum of Southern Rhodesia 2 11 1 4 a b M A Raath 1977 The Anatomy of the Triassic Theropod Syntarsus rhodesiensis Saurischia Podokesauridae and a Consideration of Its Biology Department of Zoology and Entomology Rhodes University Salisbury Rhodesia 1 233 Paul Gregory S 2010 The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs Princeton University Press p 74 ISBN 978 0 691 13720 9 a b Carpenter K Currie P J 1990 Dinosaur Systematics Approaches and Perspectives Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 91 105 ISBN 978 0 521 43810 0 Gay R 2005 Sexual Dimorphism in the Early Jurassic Theropod Dinosaur Dilophosaurus and a Comparison with Other Related Forms In Carpenter K ed 2005 The Carnivorous Dinosaurs Bloomington Indiana University Press pp 277 283 ISBN 978 0 253 34539 4 Rinehart L F Lucas S G Heckert A B 2001 Preliminary statistical analysis defining the juvenile robust and gracile forms of the Triassic dinosaur Coelophysis Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 21 93A doi 10 1080 02724634 2001 10010852 S2CID 220414868 Griffin C T Nesbitt S J 2016 Anomalously high variation in postnatal development is ancestral for dinosaurs but lost in birds Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 113 51 14757 14762 Bibcode 2016PNAS 11314757G doi 10 1073 pnas 1613813113 PMC 5187714 PMID 27930315 Glut D F 2012 Dinosaurs the Encyclopedia Supplement 7 McFarland amp Company Inc p 866 ISBN 978 0 7864 4859 3 Rothschild B Tanke D H amp Ford T L 2001 Theropod stress fractures and tendon avulsions as a clue to activity In Tanke D H Carpenter K eds 2001 Mesozoic Vertebrate Life Indiana University Press pp 331 336 ISBN 978 0 253 33907 2 Molnar R E 2001 Theropod paleopathology a literature survey In Mesozoic Vertebrate Life edited by Tanke D H and Carpenter K Indiana University Press p 337 363 Colbert Edwin H 1965 The Age of Reptiles W W Norton amp Company p 97 ISBN 978 0 486 29377 6 Weishampel D B Young L 1998 Dinosaurs of the East Coast Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 5217 6 Dinosaur footprints of the Connecticut River Valley Nash Dinosaur Track Site and Rock Shop Archived from the original on 1 January 2017 Retrieved 16 June 2015 Irmis Randall B Mundil Roland Martz Jeffrey W Parker William G 15 September 2011 High resolution U Pb ages from the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation New Mexico USA support a diachronous rise of dinosaurs Earth and Planetary Science Letters 309 3 4 258 267 Bibcode 2011E amp PSL 309 258I doi 10 1016 j epsl 2011 07 015 Holtz Thomas R Jr 2012 Dinosaurs The Most Complete Up to Date Encyclopedia for Dinosaur Lovers of All Ages Winter 2011 Appendix Braginetz Donna 2007 A new species of dinosauromorph lower left was among the mixed assemblage of dinosaurs and dinosauromorphs found at Hayden Quarry in Ghost Ranch N M American Museum of Natural History Retrieved 31 March 2013 Therrien F Fastovsky D E 2000 Paleoenvironments of early theropods Chinle Formation Late Triassic Petrified Forest National Park Arizona PALAIOS 3 15 3 194 211 Bibcode 2000Palai 15 194T doi 10 1669 0883 1351 2000 015 lt 0194 POETCF gt 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 130468695 Sues H D Nesbitt S J Berman D S Henrici A C 2011 A late surviving basal theropod dinosaur from the latest Triassic of North America Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 278 1723 3459 64 doi 10 1098 rspb 2011 0410 PMC 3177637 PMID 21490016 Heckert A B Lucas S G Rinehart L F Hunt A P 2008 A new genus and species of sphenodontian from the Ghost Ranch Coelophysis Quarry Upper Triassic Apachean Rock Point Formation New Mexico USA Palaeontology 51 4 827 845 doi 10 1111 j 1475 4983 2008 00786 x a b c Irmis R B 2005 The vertebrate fauna of the Upper Triassic Chinle Formation in northern Arizona In Nesbitt S J Parker W G Irmis R B eds Guidebook to the Triassic formations of the Colorado Plateau in northern Arizona Geology Paleontology and History PDF Mesa Southwest Museum Bulletin 9 63 88 Archived from the original PDF on 4 October 2012 Retrieved 2 January 2014 Benson R J Brusatte S Clack J Anderson J Dennis Bryan K Hone D Duffin C Johanson Z Milner A Naish D Parsons K Prothero D Xu X 2012 Prehistoric Life London Dorling Kindersley pp 214 215 ISBN 978 0 7566 9910 9 Emily J Lessner Michelle R Stocker Nathan D Smith Alan H Turner Randall B Irmis Sterling J Nesbitt 2016 A new rauisuchid Archosauria Pseudosuchia from the Upper Triassic Norian of New Mexico increases the diversity and temporal range of the clade PeerJ 4 e2336 doi 10 7717 peerj 2336 PMC 5018681 PMID 27651983 Weishampel D B Dodson P Osmolska H 2004 The Dinosauria Second ed Berkeley University of California Press pp 518 521 ISBN 978 0 520 24209 8 Mueller B D 2007 Koskinonodon Branson and Mehl 1929 a replacement name for the preoccupied temnospondyl Buettneria Case 1922 Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 27 1 225 doi 10 1671 0272 4634 2007 27 225 KBAMAR 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 85763026 Glut D F 2006 Dinosaurs the Encyclopedia Supplement 4 McFarland amp Company Inc p 749 ISBN 978 0 7864 2295 1 a b Chure D 2009 dino bones in space was it a PR thing Cleveland Museum of Natural History Archived from the original on 8 November 2011 Retrieved 12 November 2011 Parker Steve 2003 Dinosaurs the complete guide to dinosaurs Firefly Books ISBN 978 1 55297 772 9 Coelophysis the New Mexico state fossil PDF geoinfo nmt edu New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resource Retrieved 12 March 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Coelophysis nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Coelophysis Coelophysis Archived 25 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine in the Dino Directory Portals nbsp Paleontology nbsp Dinosaurs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coelophysis amp oldid 1217564365, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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