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[dinosaur] Plateosaurus (Triassic sauropodomorph), new skulls from Switzerland indicate one species (free pdf)




Ben Creisler
bcreisler@gmail.com

A new paper with free pdf:


Jens N. Lallensack, ElÅbieta M. Teschner, Ben Pabst, and P. Martin Sander (2021)
New skulls of the basal sauropodomorph Plateosaurus trossingensis from Frick, Switzerland: Is there more than one species?
Acta Palaeontologica (in press)
doi: https://doi.org/10.4202/app.00804.2020
http://app.pan.pl/article/item/app008042020.html

Free pdf:
http://app.pan.pl/archive/published/app66/app008042020.pdf



The Triassic basal sauropodomorph Plateosaurus trossingensis is well-known from mass accumulations at the German localities of Trossingen and Halberstadt and the Swiss locality of Frick, and is significant especially regarding its taphonomy and proposed developmental plasticity. These implications, however, rely on the assumption that this material derives from a single species, which has been questioned. Here we describe new skull material from Frick including eight complete and six partial skulls, more than doubling the number of known skulls of P. trossingensis. This exceptional sample size allows for gaining a deeper understanding of variability that may occur in a single species. The new material includes the first known juvenile skulls of Plateosaurus, allowing for detecting ontogenetic changes. An attempt is made to distinguish between variability caused by taphonomic plastic deformation and intraspecific variability. Plastic deformation may shorten, but not widen bones. A number of characters commonly included in phylogenetic analyses of basal sauropodomorphs are shown to be variable within P. trossingensis, and possibly require re-evaluation. Although P. trossingensis skulls are highly variable, many of the variable characters include intermediate character states and therefore are continuous. No groupings based on skull features, locality, or stratigraphy are apparent. Consequently, the analyzed skull material from the bonebeds of Frick, Trossingen, and Halberstadt bears no evidence for the presence of more than one species.

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News:

Dinosaur species: 'Everyone's unique'
Paleontologists from the Universities of Bonn and Liverpool examined 14 skulls of Plateosaurus trossingensis

https://www.uni-bonn.de/news/053-2021

https://phys.org/news/2021-02-dinosaur-species-unique.html

https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2021-02/uob-ds022621.php


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