Abstract
Gondwanan Jurassic non-neosauropod eusauropods are key for the understanding of sauropod evolution, although their phylogenetic interrelationships remain poorly understood. However, following the revision of the holotype of a key taxon from the early Middle Jurassic Cañadón Asfalto Formation Patagonia, Argentina, Patagosaurus fariasi, the phylogenetic affinities need to be tested with new osteological information gathered during the redescription of the holotype of Patagosaurus. A new phylogeny presented here shows a close affiliation of Patagosaurus with Cetiosaurus from the Middle Jurassic of the UK. The close relationship of Patagosaurus with Barapasaurus, often found in previous phylogenies, was not recovered here. Instead, Patagosaurus is retrieved as more derived than most Early and Middle Jurassic sauropods, although more basal to Mamenchisaurus, Omeisaurus, turiasaurians, and neosauropods. Another sauropod taxon found together with Patagosaurus, Volkheimeria, is retrieved several nodes more basal than the former, which shows, together with evidence of several other sauropod taxa in the Cañadón Asfalto Formation, that a high evolutionary diversity existed in Southwest Gondwana in the early Middle Jurassic, a pattern which is also seen in fossil groups other than sauropods (e.g., theropods).
Translated title of the contribution | Phylogenetic analysis of gondwanan basal eusauropods from the early-middle Jurassic of Patagonia, Argentina |
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Original language | Spanish |
Pages (from-to) | 289-298 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Journal | Spanish Journal of Paleontology |
Volume | 33 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 13 Dec 2018 |
Funding
The authors would like to thank Jaime Powell (Instituto Lillo, Tucuman), Hillary Ketchum (OUMNH, Oxford), Mark Evans (New Walk Museum, Leicester), Sandra Chapman (NHM, London), Ronan Allain (MNHN, Paris), Ulrich Joger & Ralf Kosma (SNHM, Braunschweig) for kind admission to the collections their museums. The authors are further indebted to José Luis Carballido, Emmanuel Tschopp and Phil Mannion for sharing collection images. Verónica Díez Díaz is thanked for her kind suggestions, comments and translations, as well as José Canudo, both of whose comments improved this paper. Finally, the authors acknowledge the Willi Hennig Society. FH was funded by the SEP AJISEP-2016 (SEPAI-2016-07313) grant.
Keywords
- Gondwana
- Middle Jurassic
- Patagonia
- Phylogeny
- Sauropod