Macronaria, Wilson & Sereno, 1998

Allain, Ronan, Vullo, Romain, Rozada, Lee, Anquetin, Jérémy, Bourgeais, Renaud, Goedert, Jean, Lasseron, Maxime, Martin, Jeremy E., Pérez-García, Adán, Fabrègues, Claire Peyre De, Royo-Torres, Rafael, Augier, Dominique & Bailly, Gilles, 2022, Vertebrate paleobiodiversity of the Early Cretaceous (Berriasian) Angeac-Charente Lagerstätte (southwestern France): implications for continental faunal turnover at the J / K boundary, Geodiversitas 44 (25), pp. 683-752 : 718

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5252/geodiversitas2022v44a25

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EA12DCB7-A5BE-4763-B805-25087EBD726D

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6928924

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C887B9-FF93-FFCE-745E-A32FFE57FBFE

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Macronaria
status

 

Macronaria View in CoL indet.

( Figs 24 View FIG Y-AA; 25A)

DESCRIPTION

In addition to the turiasaur, a second sauropod taxon may be present at Angeac-Charente site. It is only represented by a single abraded tooth and a tooth recovered from microremains ( Figs 24 View FIG Y-AA; 25A). They are spatulate and characterized by straight and subparallel distal and mesial edges at the base of the crown, and by the presence of a convex labial and concave lingual surface. Based on these features, these teeth are assigned to a macronarian sauropod probably close to Camarasaurus ( Wilson 2002; Upchurch et al. 2004; Mocho et al. 2017).

Sauropod track casts have also been recorded at Angeac-Charente. Thay are represented by casts of pes and manus footprints ( Rozada et al. 2021). In 2018, a sauropod footprint cast was observed above and in contact with an in-situ broken sauropod radius. It represents a spectacular “instantaneous” preservation of the action of a sauropod pes or manus crushing a sauropod long bone, and inducing bone modifications (breakage, displacement and reorientation) and sediment deformations ( Rozada et al. 2021). The footprints are identified as Sauropoda indet. because of the general circular morphology of the pes, the characteristic tubular metacarpal arrangement of the manus and also the huge size of the prints ( Carrano & Wilson 2001; Wilson 2005).

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