Reference
Kear, Benjamin P et. al. (2006) An archaic crested plesiosaur in opal from the Lower Cretaceous high-latitude deposits of Australia; Biology Letters,
An archaic crested plesiosaur in opal from the Lower Cretaceous high-latitude deposits of Australia
Principal Author
Benjamin P Kear
Other Authors
Nathalie Schroeder, Michael S Y Lee
Header
Academic paper
Journal
Biology Letters
Abstract
Umoonasaurus demoscyllus gen. et sp. nov. is a new small-bodied (approx. 2.5 m) pliosauroid plesiosaur from the Lower Cretaceous (Aptian� Albian) of southern Australia. It is represented by several partial skeletons (one with a near complete skull is the most complete opalized vertebrate fossil yet known), and is unique in having large crests on the skull midline and above the orbits. Umoonasaurus is surprisingly archaic despite its relatively late age (approx. 115 Myr ago)�being simultaneously themost basal (primitive) and last surviving rhomaleosaurid. Notably, it lacks the �pliosauromorph� features (large head, short neck, gigantism) typically characterizing many more derived Jurassic rhomaleosaurids; thus, reinforcing the suspected convergent evolution of the �pliosauromorph� hypercarnivore body plan. Umoonasaurus inhabited an Early Cretaceous high-latitude (approx. 708 S) inland seaway subject to seasonally near-freezing climatic conditions. This extreme environment supported a diverse range of plesiosaur taxa, suggesting that these marine reptiles might have possessed adaptations (e.g. heightened metabolic levels) to cope with cold-water temperatures. Indeed, survival of ancient endemic lineages such as Umoonasaurus is a common phenomenon in Australian Cretaceous vertebrate assemblages and might have been facilitated by isolation in low-temperature high-latitude regions
Keywords
plesiosaur; archaic; rhomaleosaurid; cranial crests; Early Cretaceous; high latitude
Language
English