Shartegodon altai, Velazco & Buczek & Novacek, 2017

Velazco, PaúL M., Buczek, Alexandra J. & Novacek, Michael J., 2017, Two new tritylodontids (Synapsida, Cynodontia, Mammaliamorpha) from the Upper Jurassic, southwestern Mongolia, American Museum Novitates 2017 (3874), pp. 1-36 : 5-14

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1206/3874.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/065087F6-FFBF-0C65-6B50-FC6B2AD129B7

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Shartegodon altai
status

sp. nov.

Shartegodon altai , sp. nov.

HOLOTYPE: PSS-MAE 633, a badly damaged skull with cheek teeth and partial right and left dentaries with three postcanine teeth each (figs. 3–10).

TYPE LOCALITY: Shar Teg locality, Gobi-Altai Aimag, southwestern Mongolia (fig. 1).

STRATIGRAPHIC HORIZON: From a maroon bed of the lower part of the Ulan Malgait Sequence (just above the boundary with the Shar Teg Sequence); Upper Jurassic ( Gereltsetseg, 1992; Ponomarenko et al., 2014).

ETYMOLOGY: The species name altai , derived from Mongolian, refers to the aimag (“province”), Gobi-Altai, in which the Shar Teg beds are located.

DIAGNOSIS: Differing from other tritylodontids in having a palatine that contacts the alveoli of the last upper postcanine teeth (PC4); a lack of interdigitations on the maxillo-palatine and premaxillo-palatine sutures; three foramina (two of which are probably just small round pockets) present on the jugal above PC2; upper postcanine teeth with four roots; and upper postcanine teeth with a cusp formula of 2-4-4. Differs from the species, Bienotheroides shartegensis , previously recorded at the Shar Teg locality in having a maxilla that extends laterally to contribute to the zygoma (zygomatic process of the maxilla), and in having M0 and L0 cusps on the upper postcanine (PC) teeth ( Watabe et al., 2007).

DESCRIPTION: The skull of Shartegodon altai (PSS-MAE 633) is extensively crushed (figs. 3A–B, 4A–B), and the anterior region of the skull is badly damaged, but the nasals, maxilla, premaxilla, palatine, jugal, and lacrimal are partly preserved (figs. 3A–B, 4A–B). The nasals are shattered, making it difficult to observe their contact with other bones (figs. 3B, 4B). The palate is smooth. In the palate the maxilla (preserved only on the left side) is very small and is confined to form the alveoli of PC1-PC3, with a narrow band forming the lingual margins of PC1–PC3 (fig. 3A). The maxilla extends laterally to form the zygomatic process. This process constitutes the ventral surface of the anterior root of the zygomatic arch (fig. 3A). There is no contribution of the maxilla to the orbital wall. Most of the anterior and dorsal aspects of the premaxilla are missing. Ventrally, the premaxilla is well developed and it contacts both the palatine and maxilla (fig. 3A). The premaxilla-palatine contact is a transverse suture that aligns with the posterior portion of PC1. The premaxilla-maxillary contact follows the mesiolingual shape of PC1 (fig. 3A). In lateral view the anterior premaxilla is distinctly downturned (fig. 4A–B). On left side of the skull, damage to the dorsal premaxilla reveals the presence of two incisors (figs. 3B, 4B). Root remnants of two small mesial incisors (left I1 and I2), and a large partial alveolus for the I3 root are preserved (figs. 3B, 4B). The palatine is the bestpreserved bone in the skull. Posteriorly, the palatine presents extensive horizontal processes. The suture between palatine and pterygoid cannot be observed. On the right horizontal process the lesser palatine foramen is located posteriomedial to the last postcanine tooth (fig.

ovalis; I1, first upper incisor partial root; I2, second upper incisor partial root; I3, partial alveolus for the third upper incisor; IF, infraorbital foramen; J, jugal; JF, jugular foramen; La, lacrimal; LPF, lesser palatine foramen; MF, masseteric fossa; MPS, median palatine suture; Mx, maxilla; N, nasal; OC, occipital condyle; PC1–5, upper postcanine teeth; Pl, palatine; Pmx, premaxilla. Scale bar = 5 mm.

3A). The posterior margin of the horizontal process of the palatine is damaged and, therefore, the shape of its posterior margin or internal narial opening cannot be determined. Along the median palatine suture, there is a posteriorly pronounced ridge. Additionally, a caudal nasal spine is present. The posterior termination of the median palatine suture ends at the level of the posterior margin of PC3 (fig. 3A). The palatal process of the palatine is bordered anteriorly and laterally by the maxilla and anteriorly by the premaxilla. The palatine contacts the premaxilla along a transverse suture at level to the posterior margin of PC1 (fig. 3A). Laterally the palatal process of the palatine directly contacts the alveolus of PC4 and the palatal process of the maxilla (fig. 3A). The latter is a very thin process situated between PC1–PC3 and the palatine. The anterior portion of the palatine has two small foramina (greater palatine foramina) (fig. 3A). The suture between the palatal processes of the maxillary and palatine is broadly curvilinear and lacks interdigitations. Posteriorly, the lateral walls of the nasopharyngeal canal converge, nearly contacting each other.

The anterior margin of the orbit is located directly dorsal to the distal margin of PC1 (fig. 4A). The lacrimal is exposed in lateral view, and it ventrally contacts the jugal and anteriorly contacts the premaxilla (fig. 4A). These sutures are not interdigitated. The suture between the

Pmx J PC

I1 MF J PC

lacrimal and the nasal cannot be observed due to the shattered condition of the nasals (figs. 3B, 4B). The lacrimal forms the medial orbital wall (fig. 3B). The jugal is partly preserved on the left side of the skull and its zygomatic process gently curves outward and forms the dorsal surface of the anterior root of the zygomatic arch. The jugal also forms part of the medial orbital wall and the inferior orbital wall. A large infraorbital foramen lies just below the suture between the jugal and the lacrimal (figs. 3B, 4A). There is a foramen, and two other small round depressions, possibly for muscle attachments, on the left jugal above PC2 (fig. 4A).

The basicranium is badly damaged with only a partial left region attached to the skull and an isolated portion of the right region preserved (figs. 3A–B, 4A, 5). The only identifiable structures are the left fenestra ovalis and left jugular foramen (fig. 3A). The stapedial ratio, calculated by proxy as length (1.56 mm) divided by width (0.87 mm) of the fenestra ovalis, is approximately 1.8.

Partial right masseteric fossae and left coronoid processes are preserved on both the left and right jaws (figs. 3B, 4A). The right partial dentary is preserved as a posterior fragment containing three postcanines (fig. 6A–B). The left partial dentary is also preserved only as a posterior fragment containing three mature postcanines (anterior most detached) and a fourth erupting postcanine (fig. 7A–B). The depths of the right and left dentaries below the penultimate postcanine are 6.7 mm and 7.1 mm respectively with the difference in depth likely due to distortion. The proximal portions of the coronoid crests are present on both fragments (figs. 6A, 7A) and both fragments show a well-defined Meckelian groove with a small portion of the splenial present in the groove of the right dentary (fig. 6B).

In the left premaxilla, there is evidence of the presences of three incisors. I1 and I2 are represented by remnants of their roots (figs. 3B, 4B). Lateral to the I1 and I2 roots, the left I3 partial alveolus suggests that I3 was at least five times the width of I1 or I2 (fig. 3B). No lower incisors are preserved (figs. 6A–B, 7A–B).

The upper postcanine alveolar tooth rows diverge posteriorly. Four upper postcanine teeth, almost identical in size, are preserved on both sides of the skull (table 1; figs. 3A, 8). On both sides, fifth postcanine teeth are erupting (fig. 3A). There are no diastemata between them. Each upper postcanine has four long and cylindrical roots, two anterior and two posterior, arranged in two transverse rows. The four are independent and the lingual roots are larger than the buccal ones. In occlusal view the teeth are rectangular with rounded corners and a convex mesial edge (fig. 8). There are three cusp rows that run mesiodistally across each tooth with two deep valleys running between them (figs. 3A, 8). Most of the upper postcanine teeth have two buccal, four medial, and four lingual cusps; the only exception is the right PC3, which has six lingual cusps instead of the four present in all the other teeth (fig. 8). Therefore, the generalized cusp formula is 2-4-4 (fig. 8). The cusp heights in each row are as follows (with 0 or 1 representing the most mesial cusp and 2 or 3 representing the most distal cusp): B1 <B2; M0 <M1 <M2 ≊ M3; and L0 <L1 <L3 <L2. In the case of the right PC3 the lingual cusps heights are: L0 <L1 ≊ L2 <L4 ≊ L5 <L3. There are six broken cusp apices on the left (PC1 [B2, M2]; PC2 [L2]; and PC3 [B1, B2, M3]) side and four broken apices on the right (PC1 [B1, B2]; PC2 [B2]; and PC3 [M3]) side (fig. 8). The largest cusps on all upper postcanines, B2, M2, M3, and L2, are subequal in height. The smallest cusps on all upper postcanines are M0 and L0. Five cusps exhibit different degrees of crescentic shape: M2, M3, and L2 are

Lef Right

PC1

PC3

PC4

Lef Right

pc2

pc3

pc4

strongly crescentic and present sharp lingual and buccal cristae, whereas B1 and B2 are somewhat crescentic and have a sharp lingual and blunt buccal cristae (fig. 8).

The three posterior lower postcanines are preserved on both dentaries (figs. 6A–B, 7A–B, 9, 10), the left dentary also includes a fourth erupting postcanine. Each lower postcanine has only one root (fig. 10). The root is long and square throughout its length. The upper section of the root descends vertically from the base of the crown, while the lower two-thirds of the root forms a C-shaped curve (fig. 10). The lower postcanine tooth cusps occlude in the deep valleys of the upper postcanine (figs. 3A, 8, 9). The lower postcanine teeth are rectangular in occlusal view, being longer in length than in width. There are two mesiodistal cusp rows with one valley running between them. All the lower postcanine teeth have two buccal and two lingual cusps (fig. 9). The cusp formula for the lower postcanines is 2-2 (b1, b2, l1, and l2). All cusps are subequal in height. There are several broken cusp apices on both the left (pc2 [b1]; and pc4 [b2]) and right (pc2 [b1, b2, and l1]; pc3 [b1, b2, I1, and l2]; and pc4 [b1]) sides (fig. 9). The cusps that are unbroken show a crescentic pattern. All lower postcanine cusps (lingual and buccal) present sharp lingual and buccal cristids (fig. 9). The cusp rows are slightly offset; the lingual cusps (l1 and l2) are located more mesially than the buccal cusps (b1 and b2) (fig. 9). The eruption sequence of the lower postcanines was not synchronous between both sides of the jaw: the left dentary shows the two proximal cusps (b1 and l1) and the tip b2 of pc 5 in eruption, whereas the right pc5 has not erupted.

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