[Paleontology • 2018] Volgatitan simbirskiensis • The Oldest Titanosaurian Sauropod of the Northern Hemisphere
Volgatitan simbirskiensis
Averianov & Efimov, 2018
"Titanosaur" by Olorotitan |
ABSTRACT
Volgatitan simbirskiensis, gen. et sp. nov., is
described based on a series of anterior and middle caudal vertebrae from
a single individual discovered in the Lower Cretaceous (upper
Hauterivian, Speetoniceras versicolor ammonite Zone) marine deposits at
Slantsevy Rudnik vertebrate locality near Ulyanovsk City, Russia. The
new taxon is characterized by strongly procoelous anterior and middle
caudal vertebrae, a long centrum of the first caudal vertebra, a strong
ventral ridge in the anterior and middle caudal vertebrae, a neural arch
positioned at the anterior half of the centrum, hyposphene-hypantrum
articulation in the anterior caudal vertebrae, and somphospondylous bone
texture. Phylogenetic analysis places the new taxon as a lithostrotian
titanosaur, a basal member of the lineage leading to the Lognkosauria.
This lineage previously contained only South American taxa with body
mass reaching 60–70 tons. Volgatitan gen. nov. is the first European and
the geologically oldest representative of this lineage. Its body mass
is estimated as 17.3 tons. Discovery of Volgatitan gen. nov. suggests
that the lithostrotian lineage leading to the Lognkosauria had a wider
distribution in the Early Cretaceous and became extinct everywhere
except South America by the end of the Early Cretaceous.
KEYWORDS: Dinosauria, Sauropoda, Titanosauriformes, Titanosauria, Lithostrotia, Early Cretaceous, Eastern Europe, Russia
Volgatitan simbirskiensis anterior caudal vertebra (holotype), in right lateral (A), anterior (B), left lateral (C), posterior (D), dorsal (E), and ventral (F) views. |
Alexander Averianov and Vladimir Efimov. 2018. The Oldest Titanosaurian Sauropod of the Northern Hemisphere. Biological Communications. 63(3), 145–162. DOI: 10.21638/spbu03.2018.301
Scientists from St Petersburg and Ulyanovsk have described a new giant dinosaur english.spbu.ru/news/2482-scientists-from-st-petersburg-and-ulyanovsk-have-described-a-new-giant-dinosaur
"Titanosaur" by Olorotitan deviantart.com/olorotitan/art/Titanosaur-211260962
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