My camera had a possibly-fatal accident in the field at the end of
the day on Saturday, so I didn't take any photos on Sunday or Monday.
From here on out, you're either getting my slides, or photos taken by
other people.
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image-title="Powell Museum sauropod humerus" image-description=""
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On Sunday we were at the John Wesley Powell River History Museum in
Green River, Utah, for the Cretaceous talks. There were some fossils on
display downstairs, including mounted skeletons of Falcarius
and one or two ornithischians,* and this sauropod humerus from the Cedar
Mountain Formation (many thanks to Marc Jones for the photo).
* A ceratopsian and Animantarx, maybe? They were in the same
room as the sauropod humerus, so it's no surprise that I passed them by
with barely a glance.
There were loads of great talks in the Cretaceous symposium on
Sunday, and I learned a lot, about everything from clam shrimp
biostratigraphy to ankylosaur phylogeny to Canadian sauropod trackways.
But I can't show you any slides from those talks, so the rest of this
post is the abstact from Darren's and my talk, illustrated by a few
select slides.
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image-title="Wedel Naish 2014 Sauroposeidon and kin – slide 1 title"
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Sauroposeidon is a giant titanosauriform from the Early
Cretaceous of North America. The holotype is OMNH 53062, a series of
four articulated cervical vertebrae from the Antlers Formation
(Aptian-Albian) of Oklahoma. According to recent analyses,
Paluxysaurus from the Twin Mountain Formation of Texas is the
sister taxon of OMNH 53062 and may be a junior synonym of
Sauroposeidon. Titanosauriform material from the Cloverly
Formation of Wyoming may also pertain to
Paluxysaurus/Sauroposeidon. The proposed synonymy is
based on referred material of both taxa, however, so it is not as secure
as it might be.
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image-title="Wedel Naish 2014 Sauroposeidon and kin – slide 34
Sauroposeidon characters" image-description="" image-caption=""
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Top row, vertebrae of Paluxysaurus. From left to right, the
centrum lengths of the vertebrae are 72cm, 65cm, and 45cm. Main image,
the largest and most complete vertebra of the holotype of
Sauroposeidon. Labels call out features that are present in
every Sauroposeidon vertebra where they can be assessed, but
consistently absent in Paluxysaurus. Evaluating the proposed
synonymy of Paluxysaurus and Sauroposeidon is left as
an exercise for the reader.
MIWG.7306 is a cervical vertebra of a large titanosauriform from the
Wessex Formation (Barremian) of the Isle of Wight. The specimen shares
several derived characters with the holotype of Sauroposeidon:
an elongate cervical centrum, expanded lateral pneumatic fossae, and
large, plate-like posterior centroparapophyseal laminae. In all of these
characters, the morphology of MIWG.7306 is intermediate between
Brachiosaurus and Giraffatitan on one hand, and
Sauroposeidon on the other. MIWG.7306 also shares several
previously unreported features of its internal morphology with
Sauroposeidon: reduced lateral chambers ("pleurocoels"),
camellate internal structure, 'inflated' laminae filled with pneumatic
chambers rather than solid bone, and a high Air Space Proportion (ASP).
ASPs for Sauroposeidon, MIWG.7306, and other isolated vertebrae
from the Wessex Formation are all between 0.74 and 0.89, meaning that
air spaces occupied 74-89% of the volume of the vertebrae in life. The
vertebrae of these animals were therefore lighter than those of
brachiosaurids (ASPs between 0.65 and 0.75) and other sauropods (average
ASPs less than 0.65).
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image-title="Wedel Naish 2014 Sauroposeidon and kin – slide 64 Mannion
phylogeny" image-description="" image-caption=""
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Check this out: according to at least some versions of the Mannion et
al. (2013) tree, Sauroposeidon and Paluxysaurus are
part of a global radiation of andesaurids in the Early and middle
Cretaceous. Cool!
Sauroposeidon and MIWG.7306 were originally referred to
Brachiosauridae. However, most recent phylogenetic analyses find
Sauroposeidon to be a basal somphospondyl, whether
Paluxysaurus and the Cloverly material are included or not.
Given the large number of characters it shares with
Sauroposeidon, MIWG.7306 is probably a basal somphospondyl as
well. But genuine brachiosaurids also persisted and possibly even
radiated in the Early Cretaceous of North America; these include
Abydosaurus, Cedarosaurus, Venenosaurus, and
possibly an as-yet-undescribed Cloverly form. The vertebrae of
Abydosaurus have conservative proportions and solid laminae and
the bony floor of the centrum is relatively thick. In these characters,
Abydosaurus is more similar to Brachiosaurus and
Giraffatitan than to Sauroposeidon or MIWG.7306. So
not all Early Cretaceous titanosauriforms were alike, and whatever
selective pressures led Sauroposeidon and MIWG.7306 to evolve
longer and lighter necks, they didn't prevent Giraffatitan-like
brachiosaurs such as *Abydosaurus *and Cedarosaurus from
persisting well into the Cretaceous.
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image-title="Wedel Naish 2014 Sauroposeidon and kin – slide 65 Cloverly
sauropods" image-description="" image-caption=""
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The evolutionary dynamics of sauropods in the North American
mid-Mesozoic are still mysterious. In the Morrison Formation, sauropods
as a whole are both diverse and abundant, but Camarasaurus and
an efflorescence of diplodocoids account for most of that abundance and
diversity, and titanosauriforms, represented by Brachiosaurus,
are comparatively scarce. During the Early Cretaceous, North American
titanosauriforms seem to have radiated, possibly to fill some of the
ecospace vacated by the regional extinction of basal macronarians
(Camarasaurus) and diplodocoids. However, despite a flood of
new discoveries in the past two decades, sauropods still do not seem to
have been particularly abundant in the Early Cretaceous of North
America, in contrast to sauropod-dominated faunas of the Morrison and of
other continents during the Early Cretaceous.
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That final slide deserves some explanation. On the way back from the
field on Saturday–the night before my talk–a group of us stopped at a
burger joint in Hanksville. Sharon McMullen got a kid's meal, and it
came in this bag. We took it as a good omen that Sauroposeidon
was the first dinosaur listed in the quiz.
For the full program and abstracts from both days of talks, please
download the field conference guidebook here.