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[dinosaur] Elaphrosaurine cervical vertebra from Early Cretaceous of Australia




Ben Creisler
bcreisler@gmail.com

A new paper:


Stephen F. Poropat, Adele H. Pentland, Ruairidh J. Duncan, Joseph J. Bevitt, Patricia Vickers-Rich & Thomas H. Rich (2020)
First elaphrosaurine theropod dinosaur (Ceratosauria: Noasauridae) from Australia -- A cervical vertebra from the Early Cretaceous of Victoria.
Gondwana Research (advance online publication)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2020.03.009
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1342937X20301234

Highlights

First evidence of an elaphrosaurine theropod dinosaur ever reported from Australia.
New elaphrosaurine is geologically the second youngest member of its group known worldwide.
Elaphrosaurine theropods were capable of tolerating Cretaceous near-polar climates.

Abstract

Elaphrosaurinae is an enigmatic clade of gracile ceratosaurian theropod dinosaurs known from the Late Jurassic of Africa (Elaphrosaurus bambergi) and Asia (e.g., Limusaurus inextricabilis), and the early Late Cretaceous of Argentina (Huinculsaurus montesi). Elaphrosaurinae is often placed within Noasauridae as the sister taxon to Noasaurinae, a clade of small-bodied theropods that lived in South America, Africa, Madagascar and India throughout much of the Cretaceous. Herein, we report the first evidence of Elaphrosaurinae from Australia: a nearly complete middle cervical vertebra from the upper Lower Cretaceous (lower Albian) Eumeralla Formation of Cape Otway, Victoria, Australia. The fact that this site would have been situated at ~76ÂS towards the end of the Early Cretaceous (~110â107âMa) implies that elaphrosaurines were capable of tolerating near-polar palaeoenvironments, whereas its age indicates that elaphrosaurines persisted in Australia until at least the late Early Cretaceous. The new Australian elaphrosaurine, in tandem with the recently described Huinculsaurus montesi from the CenomanianâTuronian of Argentina, implies that the spatiotemporal distribution of Elaphrosaurinae has heretofore been greatly underestimated. Historic confusion of elaphrosaurines with coelurosaurs, especially ornithomimosaurs, coupled with our generally poor understanding of noasaurid evolution, might explain the apparent dearth of fossils of this theropod clade worldwide.

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