fbpx
Wikipedia

Machimosaurus

Machimosaurus is an extinct genus of machimosaurid crocodyliform from the Late Jurassic (Kimmeridgian and Tithonian) and Early Cretaceous.[2][3] The type species, Machimosaurus hugii, was found in Switzerland. Other fossils have been found in England, France, Germany, Portugal, Switzerland and Tunisia.[2][4][5] Machimosaurus rex is the largest named teleosauroid and thalattosuchian, with an estimated length of up to 7.15 m (23.5 ft) (skull length 155 cm (61 in)).[6] Machimosaurus is the largest known crocodyliform of the Jurassic.[2][3][4][6]

Machimosaurus
Temporal range: 154–130 Ma Kimmeridgian - Hauterivian?
Machimosaurus mosae cast
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Pseudosuchia
Clade: Crocodylomorpha
Suborder: Thalattosuchia
Family: Machimosauridae
Tribe: Machimosaurini
Genus: Machimosaurus
Von Meyer, 1837
Species
  • M. hugii type Von Meyer (1837)
  • M. mosae Sauvage and Lienard 1879
  • M. nowackianus (von Huene. 1938)
  • M. buffetauti Young et al., 2015
  • M. rex Fanti et al., 2016[1]
Synonyms
  • Madrimosaurus hugii (sic)

Discovery and species Edit

 
Illustrations of the three European species

Christian Erich Hermann von Meyer in 1837 named isolated conical, blunt teeth with numerous longitudinal lines from Switzerland, Madrimosaurus hugii. However, in 1838, realising he had misspelled the name, he emended Madrimosaurus to Machimosaurus, from the Greek machimoi, ancient Egyptian troops deployed during the Ptolemaic Dynasty plus the -saurus suffix, literally meaning "pugnacious lizard".[7] The teeth of Machimosaurus, with their rounded, blunt apex and stout morphology make them characteristic and easily identifiable compared to other teleosaurid teeth.[8]

The type species, M. hugii, is known from the Kimmeridgian of Portugal, Spain, Tunisia and Switzerland.[2][7] Machimosaurus ferox and M. interruptus were previously considered junior synonyms of M. hugii,[9][10] but have been recently considered possible synonyms of Machimosaurus mosae.[7]

Krebs (1967),[9] considered M. mosae (Lienard, 1876) to be a junior synonym of M. hugii, but is considered a second valid species of the genus based on a nearly complete skeleton found from the late Kimmeridgian of France.[7][11]

Two species also placed within Machimosaurus are M. bathonicus and M. rigauxi, from the Bathonian of France.[12] However, these are gracile species, lacking the characteristic blunted teeth of Machimosaurus, and are probably referable to Steneosaurus.[7]

 
Skull

Mark Young and his colleagues [7][13] made a detailed revision of the genus and recognized four species: M. hugii, M. mosae, M. nowackianus from Harrar, Ethiopia, and a new species, Machimosaurus buffetauti. They hypothesized that Machimosaurus may have been analogous to the Pliocene–Holocene genus Crocodylus in having one large-bodied taxon suited to traversing marine barriers and additional, geographically limited taxa across its range.

The fossilized anterior portion of the lower jaw from the Late Jurassic (Oxfordian or Kimmeridgian) of Ethiopia referred to the pliosaur Simolestes nowackianus, is in fact a large species of Machimosaurus.[14]

In 2016, a new species of Machimosaurus from Douiret Formation in Tunisia was described in the journal Cretaceous Research. Named Machimosaurus rex, it was the largest teleosauroid known at the time, estimated to be 9.6 m (31.5 ft) in length (skull length 155 cm (61 in)) based on a partial skeleton.[3] M. rex was also the youngest teleosauroid known at the time. However, more recent estimates put M. hugii along with M. rex at about 6.9–7.15 m (22.6–23.5 ft) long.[6] The discovery of M. rex indicates that teleosauroid crocodylomorphs survived the extinction event at the end of the Late Jurassic, but did not retain the biodiversity seen in the Jurassic. Moreover, an incomplete specimen from the Barremian of Colombia attributed to Teleosauroidea is not only the youngest known teleosauroid, but also the largest at about 9.6 m (31.5 ft) long.[15]

Palaeobiology Edit

Niche partitioning Edit

From the Kimmeridgian-age, semi-aquatic deposits of Oker, Lower Saxony, Germany two genera of teleosaurids (Steneosaurus and Machimosaurus) are known, in addition to the neosuchian genera Goniopholis and Theriosuchus.[16] Machimosaurus and Steneosaurus are also found together in the same Tithonian-age deposits of western France.[17]

Diet Edit

 
Tooth

Bite marks on an early Kimmeridgian sauropod (Cetiosauriscus) femur from Switzerland match teeth known from Machimosaurus hugii, also found in the same deposits. This suggests either scavenging on the sauropod's corpse, or active predation from the waters edge, much like living crocodilians.[18] Kimmeridgian-age fossil turtles from "Solothurn Turtle Limestone" of northern Switzerland have bite marks, and splintered Machimosaurus teeth imbedded,[19] while fossil turtles from the Late Jurassic of Germany also possess bite marks that match teeth of Machimosaurus found in the same deposit.[20]

Morphofunctional analysis on the skull of Machimosaurus strongly suggests they ate turtles (chelonophagy).[9][10] Morphological comparison of their teeth also confirms that they are adapted to seizing and crushing hard prey.[8][21]

Locomotion Edit

Based on the vertebrae (zygapophysial) articulations, Machimosaurus is considered to have lived in open-seas, swimming by lateral undulations of the tail with the limbs used for steering and balancing. Head and neck depressing (downward moving) muscles would have been well-developed, as their attachment site on the skull (basioccipital tubera) were large. This would have greatly assisted Machimosaurus in diving.[9]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Federico Fanti, Tetsuto Miyashita, Luigi Cantelli, Fawsi Mnasri, Jihed Dridi, Michela Contessi, Andrea Cau. The largest thalattosuchian (Crocodylomorpha) supports teleosaurid survival across the Jurassic-Cretaceous boundary, Cretaceous Research, Available online 10 January 2016.
  2. ^ a b c d "Monster-Size Marine Crocodile Discovered". 11 January 2016.
  3. ^ a b c Fanti, Federico; Miyashita, Tetsuto; Cantelli, Luigi; Mnasri, Fawsi; Dridi, Jihed; Contessi, Michela; Cau, Andrea (2016). "The largest thalattosuchian (Crocodylomorpha) supports teleosaurid survival across the Jurassic-Cretaceous boundary". Cretaceous Research. 61: 263–274. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2015.11.011. hdl:11585/529635.
  4. ^ a b Steel R. 1973. Crocodylia. Handbuch der Paläoherpetologie, Teil 16. Stuttgart: Gustav Fischer Verlag,116 pp.
  5. ^ Mateus, O. 2013. Crocodylomorphs from the Mesozoic of Portugal and a new skull of eusuchian from the Late Cretaceous. Abstract book of Hwaseong International Dinosaurs Expedition Symposium, South Korea, pp: 66-68.
  6. ^ a b c Young, MT; Rabi, M.; Bell, MA; Foffa, D.; Steel, L.; Sachs, S.; Peyer, K. (2016). "Big-headed marine crocodyliforms and why we must be cautious when using extant species as body length proxies for long-extinct relatives". Palaeontologia Electronica. 19 (3): 1–14. doi:10.26879/648.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Young, M. T., Hua S., Steel L., Foffa D., Brusatte S. L., Thüring S., Mateus O., Ignacio-Ruiz Omeñaca J., Lepage Y., Havilk P., & Andrade M. B. (2014). Revision of the Late Jurassic teleosaurid genus Machimosaurus (Crocodylomorpha, Thalattosuchia). Royal Society Open Science. 1(140222), 1-42.
  8. ^ a b Vignaud, P (1997). "La morphologie dentaire des Thalattosuchia (Crocodylia, Mesosuchia)". Palaeovertebrata. 26 (1/4): 35–59.
  9. ^ a b c d Krebs, B (1967). "Der Jura-Krokodilier Machimosaurus H. v. Meyer". Paläontologische Zeitschrift. 41 (1–2): 46–55. doi:10.1007/bf02998548. S2CID 130110535.
  10. ^ a b Buffetaut, E (1982). "Le crocodilien Machimosaurus VON MEYER (Mesosuchia, Teleosauridae) dans le Kimmeridgien de l'Ain". Bulletin Trimestrielle Société de la Géologique Normandie et Amis du Museum, Havre. 69 (1/2): 17–27.
  11. ^ Hua, S; Vasse, D; Buffetaut, E; Martin, M; Mazin, J-M; Vadet, A (1993). "Un squelette de Machimosaurus mosae Sauvage et Lienard, 1879 (Crocodylia, Thalattosuchia) dans le Kimméridgien du Boulonnais". Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Série II. 317 (6): 851–856.
  12. ^ Sauvage, H-E (1874). "Mémoire sur les dinosauriens et les crocodiliens des terrains jurassiques de Boulogne-sur-Mer". Mémoires de la Société Géologique de France. Série 2. 10 (2): 1–57.
  13. ^ Young, M. T., Hua S., Steep L., Foffa D., Brusatte S. L., Thüring S., Mateus O., Ruiz-Omeñaca J. I., Havlik P., Lepage Y., & de Andrade M. B. (2015). Addendum to ‘Revision of the Late Jurassic teleosaurid genus Machimosaurus (Crocodylomorpha, Thalattosuchia)’. Royal Society Open Science. 2, , Number 2
  14. ^ Bardet, N; Hua, S (1996). "Simolestes nowackianus HUENE, 1938 from the Late Jurassic of Ethiopia is a teleosaurid crocodile, not a pliosaur". Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie, Monatshefte. 1996: 65–71. doi:10.1127/njgpm/1996/1996/65.
  15. ^ Cortes D, Larsson HCE, Maxwell EE, Parra Ruge ML, Patarroyo P, Wilson JA. 2019. An Early Cretaceous teleosauroid (Crocodylomorpha: Thalattosuchia) from Colombia. Ameghiniana. doi:10.5710/AMGH.26.09. 2019.3269.
  16. ^ Karl H-V, Gröning E, Brauckmann C, Schwarz D, Knötschke N.2006. The Late Jurassic crocodiles of the Langenberg near Oker, Lower Saxony (Germany), and description of related materials (with remarks on the history of quarrying the "Langenberg Limestone" and "Obernkirchen Sandstone"). Clausthaler Geowissenschaften 5: 59-77.
  17. ^ Billon-Bruyat J-P, Mazin J-M, Buffetaut E, Tong H, Abit D. 2001. New occurrence of vertebrate remains in the latest Jurassic of western France (Oléron island, Charente-Maritime). 6th European Workshop on Vertebrate Palaeontology - Florence and Montevarchi (Italy) - September 19–22, 2001 Abstract Booklet, p. 19
  18. ^ Meyer, CA; Thüring, CR (2003). "Dinosaurs of Switzerland". Comptes Rendus Palevol. 2 (1): 103–117. doi:10.1016/s1631-0683(03)00005-8.
  19. ^ Meyer, CA (1991). "Burial experiments with marine turtle carcasses and their paleoecological significance". PALAIOS. 6 (1): 89–96. Bibcode:1991Palai...6...89M. doi:10.2307/3514956. JSTOR 3514956.
  20. ^ Tichy, G; Karl, H-V (2004). "The structure of fossil teeth of chelonophagous crocodiles (Diapsida: Crocodylia)". Studia Geologica Salmanticensia. 40: 115–124.
  21. ^ Massare, JA (1987). "Tooth morphology and prey preference of Mesozoic marine reptiles". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 7 (2): 121–137. doi:10.1080/02724634.1987.10011647.

External links Edit

  • Angellis Net pdf

machimosaurus, extinct, genus, machimosaurid, crocodyliform, from, late, jurassic, kimmeridgian, tithonian, early, cretaceous, type, species, hugii, found, switzerland, other, fossils, have, been, found, england, france, germany, portugal, switzerland, tunisia. Machimosaurus is an extinct genus of machimosaurid crocodyliform from the Late Jurassic Kimmeridgian and Tithonian and Early Cretaceous 2 3 The type species Machimosaurus hugii was found in Switzerland Other fossils have been found in England France Germany Portugal Switzerland and Tunisia 2 4 5 Machimosaurus rex is the largest named teleosauroid and thalattosuchian with an estimated length of up to 7 15 m 23 5 ft skull length 155 cm 61 in 6 Machimosaurus is the largest known crocodyliform of the Jurassic 2 3 4 6 MachimosaurusTemporal range 154 130 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Kimmeridgian Hauterivian Machimosaurus mosae castScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ReptiliaClade PseudosuchiaClade CrocodylomorphaSuborder ThalattosuchiaFamily MachimosauridaeTribe MachimosauriniGenus MachimosaurusVon Meyer 1837Species M hugii type Von Meyer 1837 M mosae Sauvage and Lienard 1879 M nowackianus von Huene 1938 M buffetauti Young et al 2015 M rex Fanti et al 2016 1 SynonymsMadrimosaurus hugii sic Contents 1 Discovery and species 2 Palaeobiology 2 1 Niche partitioning 2 2 Diet 2 3 Locomotion 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksDiscovery and species Edit nbsp Illustrations of the three European speciesChristian Erich Hermann von Meyer in 1837 named isolated conical blunt teeth with numerous longitudinal lines from Switzerland Madrimosaurus hugii However in 1838 realising he had misspelled the name he emended Madrimosaurus to Machimosaurus from the Greek machimoi ancient Egyptian troops deployed during the Ptolemaic Dynasty plus the saurus suffix literally meaning pugnacious lizard 7 The teeth of Machimosaurus with their rounded blunt apex and stout morphology make them characteristic and easily identifiable compared to other teleosaurid teeth 8 The type species M hugii is known from the Kimmeridgian of Portugal Spain Tunisia and Switzerland 2 7 Machimosaurus ferox and M interruptus were previously considered junior synonyms of M hugii 9 10 but have been recently considered possible synonyms of Machimosaurus mosae 7 Krebs 1967 9 considered M mosae Lienard 1876 to be a junior synonym of M hugii but is considered a second valid species of the genus based on a nearly complete skeleton found from the late Kimmeridgian of France 7 11 Two species also placed within Machimosaurus are M bathonicus and M rigauxi from the Bathonian of France 12 However these are gracile species lacking the characteristic blunted teeth of Machimosaurus and are probably referable to Steneosaurus 7 nbsp SkullMark Young and his colleagues 7 13 made a detailed revision of the genus and recognized four species M hugii M mosae M nowackianus from Harrar Ethiopia and a new species Machimosaurus buffetauti They hypothesized that Machimosaurus may have been analogous to the Pliocene Holocene genus Crocodylus in having one large bodied taxon suited to traversing marine barriers and additional geographically limited taxa across its range The fossilized anterior portion of the lower jaw from the Late Jurassic Oxfordian or Kimmeridgian of Ethiopia referred to the pliosaur Simolestes nowackianus is in fact a large species of Machimosaurus 14 In 2016 a new species of Machimosaurus from Douiret Formation in Tunisia was described in the journal Cretaceous Research Named Machimosaurus rex it was the largest teleosauroid known at the time estimated to be 9 6 m 31 5 ft in length skull length 155 cm 61 in based on a partial skeleton 3 M rex was also the youngest teleosauroid known at the time However more recent estimates put M hugii along with M rex at about 6 9 7 15 m 22 6 23 5 ft long 6 The discovery of M rex indicates that teleosauroid crocodylomorphs survived the extinction event at the end of the Late Jurassic but did not retain the biodiversity seen in the Jurassic Moreover an incomplete specimen from the Barremian of Colombia attributed to Teleosauroidea is not only the youngest known teleosauroid but also the largest at about 9 6 m 31 5 ft long 15 Palaeobiology EditNiche partitioning Edit From the Kimmeridgian age semi aquatic deposits of Oker Lower Saxony Germany two genera of teleosaurids Steneosaurus and Machimosaurus are known in addition to the neosuchian genera Goniopholis and Theriosuchus 16 Machimosaurus and Steneosaurus are also found together in the same Tithonian age deposits of western France 17 Diet Edit nbsp ToothBite marks on an early Kimmeridgian sauropod Cetiosauriscus femur from Switzerland match teeth known from Machimosaurus hugii also found in the same deposits This suggests either scavenging on the sauropod s corpse or active predation from the waters edge much like living crocodilians 18 Kimmeridgian age fossil turtles from Solothurn Turtle Limestone of northern Switzerland have bite marks and splintered Machimosaurus teeth imbedded 19 while fossil turtles from the Late Jurassic of Germany also possess bite marks that match teeth of Machimosaurus found in the same deposit 20 Morphofunctional analysis on the skull of Machimosaurus strongly suggests they ate turtles chelonophagy 9 10 Morphological comparison of their teeth also confirms that they are adapted to seizing and crushing hard prey 8 21 Locomotion Edit Based on the vertebrae zygapophysial articulations Machimosaurus is considered to have lived in open seas swimming by lateral undulations of the tail with the limbs used for steering and balancing Head and neck depressing downward moving muscles would have been well developed as their attachment site on the skull basioccipital tubera were large This would have greatly assisted Machimosaurus in diving 9 See also Edit nbsp Paleontology portalList of marine reptilesReferences Edit Federico Fanti Tetsuto Miyashita Luigi Cantelli Fawsi Mnasri Jihed Dridi Michela Contessi Andrea Cau The largest thalattosuchian Crocodylomorpha supports teleosaurid survival across the Jurassic Cretaceous boundary Cretaceous Research Available online 10 January 2016 a b c d Monster Size Marine Crocodile Discovered 11 January 2016 a b c Fanti Federico Miyashita Tetsuto Cantelli Luigi Mnasri Fawsi Dridi Jihed Contessi Michela Cau Andrea 2016 The largest thalattosuchian Crocodylomorpha supports teleosaurid survival across the Jurassic Cretaceous boundary Cretaceous Research 61 263 274 doi 10 1016 j cretres 2015 11 011 hdl 11585 529635 a b Steel R 1973 Crocodylia Handbuch der Palaoherpetologie Teil 16 Stuttgart Gustav Fischer Verlag 116 pp Mateus O 2013 Crocodylomorphs from the Mesozoic of Portugal and a new skull of eusuchian from the Late Cretaceous Abstract book of Hwaseong International Dinosaurs Expedition Symposium South Korea pp 66 68 a b c Young MT Rabi M Bell MA Foffa D Steel L Sachs S Peyer K 2016 Big headed marine crocodyliforms and why we must be cautious when using extant species as body length proxies for long extinct relatives Palaeontologia Electronica 19 3 1 14 doi 10 26879 648 a b c d e f Young M T Hua S Steel L Foffa D Brusatte S L Thuring S Mateus O Ignacio Ruiz Omenaca J Lepage Y Havilk P amp Andrade M B 2014 Revision of the Late Jurassic teleosaurid genus Machimosaurus Crocodylomorpha Thalattosuchia Royal Society Open Science 1 140222 1 42 a b Vignaud P 1997 La morphologie dentaire des Thalattosuchia Crocodylia Mesosuchia Palaeovertebrata 26 1 4 35 59 a b c d Krebs B 1967 Der Jura Krokodilier Machimosaurus H v Meyer Palaontologische Zeitschrift 41 1 2 46 55 doi 10 1007 bf02998548 S2CID 130110535 a b Buffetaut E 1982 Le crocodilien Machimosaurus VON MEYER Mesosuchia Teleosauridae dans le Kimmeridgien de l Ain Bulletin Trimestrielle Societe de la Geologique Normandie et Amis du Museum Havre 69 1 2 17 27 Hua S Vasse D Buffetaut E Martin M Mazin J M Vadet A 1993 Un squelette de Machimosaurus mosae Sauvage et Lienard 1879 Crocodylia Thalattosuchia dans le Kimmeridgien du Boulonnais Comptes Rendus de l Academie des Sciences Serie II 317 6 851 856 Sauvage H E 1874 Memoire sur les dinosauriens et les crocodiliens des terrains jurassiques de Boulogne sur Mer Memoires de la Societe Geologique de France Serie 2 10 2 1 57 Young M T Hua S Steep L Foffa D Brusatte S L Thuring S Mateus O Ruiz Omenaca J I Havlik P Lepage Y amp de Andrade M B 2015 Addendum to Revision of the Late Jurassic teleosaurid genus Machimosaurus Crocodylomorpha Thalattosuchia Royal Society Open Science 2 Number 2 Bardet N Hua S 1996 Simolestes nowackianus HUENE 1938 from the Late Jurassic of Ethiopia is a teleosaurid crocodile not a pliosaur Neues Jahrbuch fur Geologie und Palaontologie Monatshefte 1996 65 71 doi 10 1127 njgpm 1996 1996 65 Cortes D Larsson HCE Maxwell EE Parra Ruge ML Patarroyo P Wilson JA 2019 An Early Cretaceous teleosauroid Crocodylomorpha Thalattosuchia from Colombia Ameghiniana doi 10 5710 AMGH 26 09 2019 3269 Karl H V Groning E Brauckmann C Schwarz D Knotschke N 2006 The Late Jurassic crocodiles of the Langenberg near Oker Lower Saxony Germany and description of related materials with remarks on the history of quarrying the Langenberg Limestone and Obernkirchen Sandstone Clausthaler Geowissenschaften 5 59 77 Billon Bruyat J P Mazin J M Buffetaut E Tong H Abit D 2001 New occurrence of vertebrate remains in the latest Jurassic of western France Oleron island Charente Maritime 6th European Workshop on Vertebrate Palaeontology Florence and Montevarchi Italy September 19 22 2001 Abstract Booklet p 19 Meyer CA Thuring CR 2003 Dinosaurs of Switzerland Comptes Rendus Palevol 2 1 103 117 doi 10 1016 s1631 0683 03 00005 8 Meyer CA 1991 Burial experiments with marine turtle carcasses and their paleoecological significance PALAIOS 6 1 89 96 Bibcode 1991Palai 6 89M doi 10 2307 3514956 JSTOR 3514956 Tichy G Karl H V 2004 The structure of fossil teeth of chelonophagous crocodiles Diapsida Crocodylia Studia Geologica Salmanticensia 40 115 124 Massare JA 1987 Tooth morphology and prey preference of Mesozoic marine reptiles Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 7 2 121 137 doi 10 1080 02724634 1987 10011647 External links EditAngellis Net pdf Images on French Paleopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Machimosaurus amp oldid 1166018654, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.