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[dinosaur] Ornithurine bird coracoid from Late Cretaceous of Alberta




Ben Creisler
bcreisler@gmail.com


A new paper:


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Sydney R. Mohr, John H. Acorn, Gregory Funston & Philip J. Currie (2020)
An ornithurine bird coracoid from the Late Cretaceous of Alberta, Canada.
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (advance online publication)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2019-0202
https://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/abs/10.1139/cjes-2019-0202#.XvYA0m1KjX4



The Cretaceous birds of Alberta are poorly known, as skeletal elements are rare and typically consist of fragmentary postcranial remains. A partial avian coracoid from the upper Campanian Dinosaur Park Formation of Alberta, Canada can be referred to the Ornithurae, and is referred to here as Ornithurine G (cf. Cimolopteryx). Its structure is similar to previously described ornithurine coracoids from Alberta and other localities in North America, particularly those belonging to the genus Cimolopteryx. A comparison of these elements indicates that the new coracoid is distinct; however, its preservation prevents complete diagnosis. As other Cimolopteryx are Maastrichtian in age, Ornithurine G (cf. Cimolopteryx) also represents the earliest occurrence of a Cimolopteryx-like anatomy. A pneumatized coracoid is a diagnostic trait of Neornithes, often associated with the presence of a pneumatic foramen. Ornithurine G (cf. Cimolopteryx) does not preserve this feature. CT and micro-CT scans of both pneumatic and apneumatic coracoids of modern birds show similar internal structures to Ornithurine G (cf. Cimolopteryx), indicating that pneumaticity of the coracoid cannot be determined in the absence of an external pneumatic foramen. A comparison between members of Cimolopterygidae, including Cimolopteryx and Lamarqueavis, raises questions about the assignment of Lamarqueavis to the Cimolopterygidae, and the validity of this family as a whole.

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