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[dinosaur] Albadraco, new azhdarchid from Maastrichtian of Transylvania (Romania)




Ben Creisler
bcreisler@gmail.com

A new paper:


Albadraco tharmisensis gen. et sp. nov.

Alexandru A. Solomon, Vlad A. Codrea, MÃrton Venczel & Gerald Grellet-Tinner (2019)ÂÂ
A new species of large-sized pterosaur from the Maastrichtian of Transylvania (Romania).
Cretaceous Research Article 104316 (advance online publication)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cretres.2019.104316
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0195667119301016


Highlights

A new large-sized azhdarchid pterosaur is described.
Although not fully-grown, Albadraco represents a new azhdarchid species.
It is intermediate between giant and medium-sized azhdarchids.
It indicates highly diverse ecosystems from HaÈeg Island.

ABSTRACT

The Upper Cretaceous âHaÈeg Islandâ is not only renowned mostly for its peculiar assemblage of dwarf dinosaurs, but also for its Azhdarchidae pterosaurs including giant specimens (e.g. Hatzegopteryx thambema) and medium-sized ones (e.g. Eurazhdarcho langendorfensis), discovered in the HaÈeg and Transylvanian basins of Romania. Here, we report a new species of azhdarchid pterosaur, Albadraco tharmisensis gen. et sp. nov. The material refers to two well-preserved "beak" fragments and a cervical vertebra. These fossils were discovered together in a fossil assemblage in the Maastrichtian Èard Formation, located in the southwestern area of the Transylvanian Basin (Alba District, Romania). The association of a premaxilla and a mandibular symphysis from the same specimen is the first ever reported in Europe. The fourth cervical exhibits the best three-dimensional preservation of any azhdarchid mid-cervical vertebra in Transylvania, as all specimens reported previously are poorly preserved (e.g. in E. langendorfensis) or incomplete like the specimen from Pui with a broken condyle. Albadraco tharmisensis represents a new species of a largeâsized azhdarchid from the âHaÈeg Islandâ. Its size fits between that of E. langendorfensis and H. thambema, hence confirming the co-existence of medium, large, and giantâsized azhdarchids during the Maastrichtian in Transylvania. The possibility of Ad. tharmisensis being a young Hatzegopteryx is also discussed.