Reference
Adams, Dawn A. (1997) Trinacromerum bonneri new species. Last and fastest pliosaur of the Western Interior Seaway; Texas Journal of Science, 49(3), pp.179-198
Trinacromerum bonneri new species. Last and fastest pliosaur of the Western Interior Seaway
Principal Author
Dawn A. Adams
Header
Academic paper
Journal
Texas Journal of Science
Volume
49
Issue
3
Pages
179-198
Abstract
The Pierre Shale represents the final days of the Western Interior Seaway before its regression at the end of the Mesozoic, and records the last of the marine reptiles that dominated the seas much as their contemporary dinosaur counterparts dominated the land. <i>Trinacromerumbonneri </i> , n.sp., is the first pliosaur (short-necked plesiosaur) to be described from this formation in the northern Great Plains; as such it represents the final radiation of polytcotylid plesiosaurs in North America. Pliosaurs have long been regarded as particularly high-speed swimmers, but in <I> T. bonneri</I> this trend is carried to an extreme. Development of the longest wingfins known in pliosaurs maximised its velocity. Unique limb and vertbral structures resisted pressures of the surrounding water that were generated by its own swimming velocity. Such adaptations include tongue-and-groove articular surfaces between critical limb elements and highly interlocking vertebrae.
Keywords
Sauropterygia
Language
English