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Tawa hallae

Tawa (named after the Hopi word for the Puebloan sun god) is a genus of possible basal theropod dinosaurs from the Late Triassic period.[1] The fossil remains of Tawa hallae, the type and only species were found in the Hayden Quarry of Ghost Ranch, New Mexico, US. Its discovery alongside the relatives of Coelophysis and Herrerasaurus supports the hypothesis that the earliest dinosaurs arose in Gondwana during the early Late Triassic period in what is now South America, and radiated from there around the globe.[2] The specific name honours Ruth Hall, founder of the Ghost Ranch Museum of Paleontology.[3]

Tawa hallae
Temporal range: Late Triassic, 215 Ma
Life restoration
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Clade: Saurischia
Clade: Theropoda (?)
Genus: Tawa
Nesbitt et al., 2009
Species:
T. hallae
Binomial name
Tawa hallae
Nesbitt et al., 2009

Description edit

 
Skeletal diagram, with known material in white and unknown in grey

Tawa was estimated to have been 2.5 m (8 ft 2 in) long as an adult, with a weight of 15 kg (33 lb).[4] Tawa preserves characters that can be associated with different dinosaur taxa. Its skull morphology resembles that of coelophysoids and the ilium approximates that of a herrerasaurid. Like the coelophysoids, Tawa has a kink in its upper jaws, between the maxilla and the premaxilla. With respect to limb proportion, the femur is very long compared to the tibia. A neck vertebral adaptation in Tawa supports the hypothesis that cervical air sacs antedate the origin of the Neotheropoda and may be ancestral for saurischians, and also links the dinosaurs with the evolution of birds. Compared to earlier dinosaurs such as Herrerasaurus and Eoraptor, Tawa had a relatively slender build.[3]

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 Nesbitt et al. (2009) Tawa can be distinguished based on the following features: the prootic bones meet on the ventral midline of the endocranial cavity, the anterior tympanic recess is greatly enlarged on the anterior surface of the basioccipital and extends onto the prootic and the parabasisphenoid, a deep recess is present on posterodorsal base of the paroccipital process, a sharp ridge extending dorsoventrally on the middle of the posterior face of the basal tuber, an incomplete ligamental sulcus is present on the posterior side of the femoral head, a semicircular muscle scar/excavation is present on the posterior face of femoral head, a small semicircular excavation on posterior margin of medial posterior condyle of proximal tibia, a "step" is present on the ventral surface of the astragalus, metatarsal I is similar in length to the other metatarsals.[3]

Discovery edit

 
Life restoration and size comparison

Fossils now attributed to Tawa were first discovered in 2004. The holotype, a juvenile individual, cataloged GR 241, consists of a mostly complete, but disarticulated skull, forelimbs, a partial vertebral column, hindlimbs, ribs, and gastralia. The determination was made that this specimen is a juvenile based on the presence of an open braincase and unfused neurocentral sutures. Fossils of at least seven other individuals were also discovered at the site. One of these specimens, cataloged GR 242, is also nearly complete. An isolated femur, GR 244, suggests that adults were at least 30% larger than the juvenile holotype. GR 242 was assigned as a paratype for the genus along with specimens representing a femora, pelvis, and tail (GR 155); and cervical vertebrae (GR 243).[3]

All of these specimens are from the Hayden Quarry, a site in New Mexico, which preserves many fossils of early dinosaurs and their close relatives. They were discovered in gray/green siltstone dating to the Norian stage of the Triassic period, about 215-213 million years ago.[5] Tawa was formally described in 2009 by a group of six American researchers led by Sterling J. Nesbitt of the American Museum of Natural History.[3] At the time of publication in the journal Science, Nesbitt was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Texas at Austin's Jackson School of Geosciences.[6]

Based on the study of the overlapping material of Dromomeron romeri and Tawa, S. Christopher Bennett proposed that the two taxa were conspecific, forming a single growth series with D. romeri being the juvenile and Tawa being the adult.[7] However, noting prominent differences between their femora which cannot be attributed to variation with age, Rodrigo Müller rejected this proposal in 2017. He further noted that while D. romeri is known from juveniles only, it shares many traits in common with D. gigas, which is known from mature specimens.[5]

Classification edit

 Dinosauria 

 Ornithischia 

 Saurischia 

Sauropodomorpha 

 Theropoda 

Herrerasauridae 

    

 Eoraptor 

    

Tawa

 Neotheropoda 
    
    

 Liliensternus 

 Jurassic theropods 

The type species is Tawa hallae, which was described in 2009 by Nesbitt et al., and considered more basal than Coelophysis, an early theropod from the Late Triassic. In 2009, Mortimer cautioned that the analysis by Nesbitt et al. was limited because it failed to consider all the characters of the relevant dinosaurs treated by the old analysis (e.g. Guaibasaurus, Panphagia, Sinosaurus, Dracovenator, Lophostropheus, etc.)[8] Tawa was however found to be more advanced than the earliest theropod dinosaurs, Eoraptor and Herrerasaurus,[9] and Staurikosaurus.

Sues et al. (2011) considered Tawa a derived early theropod.[10] A cladistic analysis of Tawa and other early theropods indicate that the Coelophysoidea, a group of early dinosaurs, may be an artificial grouping because Tawa combines classic coelophysoid features with features which appear to be ancestral to the neotheropods. Tawa is believed to be the sister taxon of Neotheropoda, a group of carnivorous dinosaurs which largely bore only three functional digits on their feet.[3]

In 2011, Martinez and colleagues concluded that Tawa was the basalmost coelophysoid,[11] while a second 2011 analysis by paleontologists Martin D. Ezcurra and Stephen L. Brusatte, as well as a follow-up analysis modified with additional data by You Hai-Lu and colleagues in 2014, found Tawa to be a primitive theropod.[12][13] This position for Tawa was also recovered in the large analysis of early dinosaurs by Matthew Baron, David B. Norman and Paul Barrett in 2017.[14]

Cau (2018)[15] and Novas et al. (2021)[16] considered Tawa a non-herrerasaurid herrerasaur, although the first study placed Herrerasauria outside Dinosauria and the second placed it in Saurischia.

Paleoecology edit

 
Size comparison between the holotype, an adult specimen, and a human.

The Hayden Quarry at Ghost Ranch belongs to the lower portion of the Petrified Forest Member of the Chinle Formation in New Mexico. The discovery of Tawa alongside the relatives of Coelophysis and Camposaurus supports the hypothesis that the earliest dinosaurs arose in Gondwana during the Late Triassic period in what is now South America, and radiated around the globe from there.

Ghost Ranch was located close to the equator 200 million years ago, and had a warm, monsoon-like climate with heavy seasonal precipitation. Hayden Quarry, an excavation site at Ghost Ranch, 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.[17] Tawa's paleoenvironment included various archosauriforms such as crocodylomorphs, "rauisuchians", phytosaurs, and dinosauriforms like Dromomeron, Chindesaurus, Eucoelophysis, and possibly Coelophysis.[18]

Based on their review of the early carnivorous dinosaur fauna from Ghost Ranch and the Ischigualasto Formation Nesbit et al. (2009) observed that each was descended from a separate lineage, and inferred that the "South American" protocontinent Gondwana was the ancestral range for basal dinosaurs. Nesbit et al. (2009) went on to note that dinosaurs left their ancestral range in Gondwana and 200 million years ago they dispersed across the adjoined continents of Pangea.[3]

Nesbit et al. (2009) noted that repeated flooding events collected vertebrate bones, carcasses, and plant material from the landscape surface, possibly in hyperconcentrated flows, and deposited them at what is now Hayden Quarry. It was observed that these flooding events were separated by intervals where there was standing water and weakly developed, poorly drained (hydromorphic) soil formation. The Tawa specimens were very well preserved which suggests that they were buried extremely soon after dying.[3]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Maffly, Brian (December 10, 2009), , Salt Lake Tribune, archived from the original on December 13, 2009
  2. ^ , National Geographic, December 10, 2009, archived from the original on December 13, 2009
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Nesbitt, Sterling J.; Smith, Nathan D.; Irmis, Randall B.; Turner, Alan H.; Downs, Alex; Norell, Mark A. (11 December 2009). "A Complete Skeleton of a Late Triassic Saurischian and the Early Evolution of Dinosaurs". Science. 326 (5959): 1530–1533. Bibcode:2009Sci...326.1530N. doi:10.1126/science.1180350. PMID 20007898. S2CID 8349110.
  4. ^ Paul, G.S. (2010). "Theropods". The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 74. ISBN 9780691167664.
  5. ^ a b Müller, R.T. (2017). "Are the dinosauromorph femora from the Upper Triassic of Hayden Quarry (New Mexico) three stages in a growth series of a single taxon?" (PDF). Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciências. 89 (2): 835–839. doi:10.1590/0001-3765201720160583. PMID 28489198.
  6. ^ Airhart, Marc (December 10, 2009), , Jackson School of Geosciences, archived from the original on March 10, 2010
  7. ^ Bennett, S.C. (2013). "A Rebuttal to Nesbitt's and Hone's "An external mandibular fenestra and other archosauriform characteristics in basal pterosaurs"" (PDF). International Symposium on Pterosaurs: 19–22.
  8. ^ DML: http://dml.cmnh.org/2009Dec/msg00122.html
  9. ^ Harmon, Katherine (December 10, 2009), "Newly Discovered T. Rex Relative Fleshes Out Early Dino Evolution", Scientific American
  10. ^ Sues, Hans-Dieter; Nesbitt, Sterling J.; Berman, David S; Henrici, Amy C. (22 November 2011). "A late-surviving basal theropod dinosaur from the latest Triassic of North America". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 278 (1723): 3459–3464. doi:10.1098/rspb.2011.0410. PMC 3177637. PMID 21490016.
  11. ^ Martinez, Sereno; Alcober, Columbi; Renne, Montanez; Currie (2011). "A basal dinosaur from the dawn of the dinosaur era in Southwestern Pangaea". Science. 331 (6014): 206–210. Bibcode:2011Sci...331..206M. doi:10.1126/science.1198467. hdl:11336/69202. PMID 21233386. S2CID 33506648.
  12. ^ 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.
  13. ^ You, H.-L.; Azuma, Y.; Wang, T.; Wang, Y.-M.; Dong, Z.-M. (2014). "The first well-preserved coelophysoid theropod dinosaur from Asia". Zootaxa. 3873 (3): 233–249. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.3873.3.3. PMID 25544219.
  14. ^ Baron, M.G.; Norman, D.B.; Barrett, P.M. (2017). "A new hypothesis of dinosaur relationships and early dinosaur evolution". Nature. 543 (7646): 501–506. Bibcode:2017Natur.543..501B. doi:10.1038/nature21700. PMID 28332513. S2CID 205254710.
  15. ^ Cau, Andrea (2018). "The assembly of the avian body plan : a 160-million-year long process" (PDF). Bollettino della Società Paleontologica Italiana. 57 (1): 1–25. S2CID 44078918.
  16. ^ Novas, Fernando E.; Agnolin, Federico L.; Ezcurra, Martín D.; Temp Müller, Rodrigo; Martinelli, Agustín G.; Langer, Max C. (October 2021). "Review of the fossil record of early dinosaurs from South America, and its phylogenetic implications". Journal of South American Earth Sciences. 110: 103341. Bibcode:2021JSAES.11003341N. doi:10.1016/j.jsames.2021.103341.
  17. ^ Braginetz, Donna. "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.
  18. ^ Irmis et al. 2007[full citation needed]

External links edit

tawa, hallae, tawa, named, after, hopi, word, puebloan, genus, possible, basal, theropod, dinosaurs, from, late, triassic, period, fossil, remains, type, only, species, were, found, hayden, quarry, ghost, ranch, mexico, discovery, alongside, relatives, coeloph. Tawa named after the Hopi word for the Puebloan sun god is a genus of possible basal theropod dinosaurs from the Late Triassic period 1 The fossil remains of Tawa hallae the type and only species were found in the Hayden Quarry of Ghost Ranch New Mexico US Its discovery alongside the relatives of Coelophysisand Herrerasaurus supports the hypothesis that the earliest dinosaurs arose in Gondwana during the early Late Triassic period in what is now South America and radiated from there around the globe 2 The specific name honours Ruth Hall founder of the Ghost Ranch Museum of Paleontology 3 Tawa hallaeTemporal range Late Triassic 215 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Life restoration Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Clade Dinosauria Clade Saurischia Clade Theropoda Genus TawaNesbitt et al 2009 Species T hallae Binomial name Tawa hallaeNesbitt et al 2009 Contents 1 Description 2 Discovery 3 Classification 4 Paleoecology 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksDescription edit nbsp Skeletal diagram with known material in white and unknown in grey Tawa was estimated to have been 2 5 m 8 ft 2 in long as an adult with a weight of 15 kg 33 lb 4 Tawa preserves characters that can be associated with different dinosaur taxa Its skull morphology resembles that of coelophysoids and the ilium approximates that of a herrerasaurid Like the coelophysoids Tawa has a kink in its upper jaws between the maxilla and the premaxilla With respect to limb proportion the femur is very long compared to the tibia A neck vertebral adaptation in Tawa supports the hypothesis that cervical air sacs antedate the origin of the Neotheropoda and may be ancestral for saurischians and also links the dinosaurs with the evolution of birds Compared to earlier dinosaurs such as Herrerasaurusand Eoraptor Tawa had a relatively slender build 3 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 Nesbitt et al 2009 Tawa can be distinguished based on the following features the prootic bones meet on the ventral midline of the endocranial cavity the anterior tympanic recess is greatly enlarged on the anterior surface of the basioccipital and extends onto the prootic and the parabasisphenoid a deep recess is present on posterodorsal base of the paroccipital process a sharp ridge extending dorsoventrally on the middle of the posterior face of the basal tuber an incomplete ligamental sulcus is present on the posterior side of the femoral head a semicircular muscle scar excavation is present on the posterior face of femoral head a small semicircular excavation on posterior margin of medial posterior condyle of proximal tibia a step is present on the ventral surface of the astragalus metatarsal I is similar in length to the other metatarsals 3 Discovery edit nbsp Life restoration and size comparison Fossils now attributed to Tawa were first discovered in 2004 The holotype a juvenile individual cataloged GR 241 consists of a mostly complete but disarticulated skull forelimbs a partial vertebral column hindlimbs ribs and gastralia The determination was made that this specimen is a juvenile based on the presence of an open braincase and unfused neurocentral sutures Fossils of at least seven other individuals were also discovered at the site One of these specimens cataloged GR 242 is also nearly complete An isolated femur GR 244 suggests that adults were at least 30 larger than the juvenile holotype GR 242 was assigned as a paratype for the genus along with specimens representing a femora pelvis and tail GR 155 and cervical vertebrae GR 243 3 All of these specimens are from the Hayden Quarry a site in New Mexico which preserves many fossils of early dinosaurs and their close relatives They were discovered in gray green siltstone dating to the Norian stage of the Triassic period about 215 213 million years ago 5 Tawa was formally described in 2009 by a group of six American researchers led by Sterling J Nesbitt of the American Museum of Natural History 3 At the time of publication in the journal Science Nesbitt was a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Texas at Austin s Jackson School of Geosciences 6 Based on the study of the overlapping material of Dromomeron romeri and Tawa S Christopher Bennett proposed that the two taxa were conspecific forming a single growth series with D romeri being the juvenile and Tawa being the adult 7 However noting prominent differences between their femora which cannot be attributed to variation with age Rodrigo Muller rejected this proposal in 2017 He further noted that while D romeri is known from juveniles only it shares many traits in common with D gigas which is known from mature specimens 5 Classification edit Dinosauria Ornithischia Saurischia Sauropodomorpha Theropoda Herrerasauridae Eoraptor Tawa Neotheropoda Coelophysis Megapnosaurus Liliensternus Jurassic theropods The type species is Tawa hallae which was described in 2009 by Nesbitt et al and considered more basal than Coelophysis an early theropod from the Late Triassic In 2009 Mortimer cautioned that the analysis by Nesbitt et al was limited because it failed to consider all the characters of the relevant dinosaurs treated by the old analysis e g Guaibasaurus Panphagia Sinosaurus Dracovenator Lophostropheus etc 8 Tawa was however found to be more advanced than the earliest theropod dinosaurs Eoraptor and Herrerasaurus 9 and Staurikosaurus Sues et al 2011 considered Tawa a derived early theropod 10 A cladistic analysis of Tawa and other early theropods indicate that the Coelophysoidea a group of early dinosaurs may be an artificial grouping because Tawa combines classic coelophysoid features with features which appear to be ancestral to the neotheropods Tawa is believed to be the sister taxon of Neotheropoda a group of carnivorous dinosaurs which largely bore only three functional digits on their feet 3 In 2011 Martinez and colleagues concluded that Tawa was the basalmost coelophysoid 11 while a second 2011 analysis by paleontologists Martin D Ezcurra and Stephen L Brusatte as well as a follow up analysis modified with additional data by You Hai Lu and colleagues in 2014 found Tawa to be a primitive theropod 12 13 This position for Tawa was also recovered in the large analysis of early dinosaurs by Matthew Baron David B Norman and Paul Barrett in 2017 14 Cau 2018 15 and Novas et al 2021 16 considered Tawa a non herrerasaurid herrerasaur although the first study placed Herrerasauria outside Dinosauria and the second placed it in Saurischia Paleoecology edit nbsp Size comparison between the holotype an adult specimen and a human The Hayden Quarry at Ghost Ranch belongs to the lower portion of the Petrified Forest Member of the Chinle Formation in New Mexico The discovery of Tawa alongside the relatives of Coelophysis and Camposaurus supports the hypothesis that the earliest dinosaurs arose in Gondwana during the Late Triassic period in what is now South America and radiated around the globe from there Ghost Ranch was located close to the equator 200 million years ago and had a warm monsoon like climate with heavy seasonal precipitation Hayden Quarry an excavation site at Ghost Ranch 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 17 Tawa s paleoenvironment included various archosauriforms such as crocodylomorphs rauisuchians phytosaurs and dinosauriforms like Dromomeron Chindesaurus Eucoelophysis and possibly Coelophysis 18 Based on their review of the early carnivorous dinosaur fauna from Ghost Ranch and the Ischigualasto Formation Nesbit et al 2009 observed that each was descended from a separate lineage and inferred that the South American protocontinent Gondwana was the ancestral range for basal dinosaurs Nesbit et al 2009 went on to note that dinosaurs left their ancestral range in Gondwana and 200 million years ago they dispersed across the adjoined continents of Pangea 3 Nesbit et al 2009 noted that repeated flooding events collected vertebrate bones carcasses and plant material from the landscape surface possibly in hyperconcentrated flows and deposited them at what is now Hayden Quarry It was observed that these flooding events were separated by intervals where there was standing water and weakly developed poorly drained hydromorphic soil formation The Tawa specimens were very well preserved which suggests that they were buried extremely soon after dying 3 See also edit2009 in paleontologyReferences edit Maffly Brian December 10 2009 New Mexico find sheds light on early dinosaur dispersal Salt Lake Tribune archived from the original on December 13 2009 New T Rex Cousin Suggests Dinosaurs Arose in S America National Geographic December 10 2009 archived from the original on December 13 2009 a b c d e f g h Nesbitt Sterling J Smith Nathan D Irmis Randall B Turner Alan H Downs Alex Norell Mark A 11 December 2009 A Complete Skeleton of a Late Triassic Saurischian and the Early Evolution of Dinosaurs Science 326 5959 1530 1533 Bibcode 2009Sci 326 1530N doi 10 1126 science 1180350 PMID 20007898 S2CID 8349110 Paul G S 2010 Theropods The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs Princeton Princeton University Press p 74 ISBN 9780691167664 a b Muller R T 2017 Are the dinosauromorph femora from the Upper Triassic of Hayden Quarry New Mexico three stages in a growth series of a single taxon PDF Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciencias 89 2 835 839 doi 10 1590 0001 3765201720160583 PMID 28489198 Airhart Marc December 10 2009 New Meat Eating Dinosaur Alters Evolutionary Tree Jackson School of Geosciences archived from the original on March 10 2010 Bennett S C 2013 A Rebuttal to Nesbitt s and Hone s An external mandibular fenestra and other archosauriform characteristics in basal pterosaurs PDF International Symposium on Pterosaurs 19 22 DML http dml cmnh org 2009Dec msg00122 html Harmon Katherine December 10 2009 Newly Discovered T Rex Relative Fleshes Out Early Dino Evolution Scientific American Sues Hans Dieter Nesbitt Sterling J Berman David S Henrici Amy C 22 November 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 3464 doi 10 1098 rspb 2011 0410 PMC 3177637 PMID 21490016 Martinez Sereno Alcober Columbi Renne Montanez Currie 2011 A basal dinosaur from the dawn of the dinosaur era in Southwestern Pangaea Science 331 6014 206 210 Bibcode 2011Sci 331 206M doi 10 1126 science 1198467 hdl 11336 69202 PMID 21233386 S2CID 33506648 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 You H L Azuma Y Wang T Wang Y M Dong Z M 2014 The first well preserved coelophysoid theropod dinosaur from Asia Zootaxa 3873 3 233 249 doi 10 11646 zootaxa 3873 3 3 PMID 25544219 Baron M G Norman D B Barrett P M 2017 A new hypothesis of dinosaur relationships and early dinosaur evolution Nature 543 7646 501 506 Bibcode 2017Natur 543 501B doi 10 1038 nature21700 PMID 28332513 S2CID 205254710 Cau Andrea 2018 The assembly of the avian body plan a 160 million year long process PDF Bollettino della Societa Paleontologica Italiana 57 1 1 25 S2CID 44078918 Novas Fernando E Agnolin Federico L Ezcurra Martin D Temp Muller Rodrigo Martinelli Agustin G Langer Max C October 2021 Review of the fossil record of early dinosaurs from South America and its phylogenetic implications Journal of South American Earth Sciences 110 103341 Bibcode 2021JSAES 11003341N doi 10 1016 j jsames 2021 103341 Braginetz Donna 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 Irmis et al 2007 full citation needed External links editNational Science Foundation special report on Tawa hallae Portal nbsp Dinosaurs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tawa hallae amp oldid 1220044387, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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