Bonitasaura is a genus of titanosaurian dinosaur hailing from uppermost layers of the Late Cretaceous (Santonian) Bajo de la Carpa Formation, Neuquén Group of the eastern Neuquén Basin, located in Río Negro Province, Northwestern Patagonia, Argentina. The remains, consisting of a partial sub-adult skeleton jumbled in a small area of fluvial sandstone, including a lower jaw with teeth, a partial vertebrae series, and limb bones, were described by Sebastian Apesteguía in 2004.[1]
Bonitasaura Temporal range: Santonian
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Right dentary | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Clade: | Dinosauria |
Clade: | Saurischia |
Clade: | †Sauropodomorpha |
Clade: | †Sauropoda |
Clade: | †Macronaria |
Clade: | †Titanosauria |
Clade: | †Colossosauria |
Genus: | †Bonitasaura Apesteguía, 2004 |
Type species | |
†Bonitasaura salgadoi Apesteguía, 2004
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The genus name Bonitasaura refers to the fossil quarry's name, "La Bonita", while the name of the type species, B. salgadoi, pays homage to Leonardo Salgado, a renowned Argentine paleontologist.[2]
Description
editBonitasaura measured 10 metres (33 ft) in length, and had a skull similar to another group of sauropods, the diplodocids. The lower jaw had a distinctive, sharp ridge immediately behind a reduced set of teeth. This ridge supported in life a sharp, beak-like keratin sheath that probably paired with a similar structure in the upper jaw. The keratin sheath worked much like a guillotine to crop vegetation raked into the mouth by the peg-like front teeth. This animal also had a rather short neck and robust projections of the back vertebrae for muscle attachment, indicating that the neck was used in vigorous exertions, probably during feeding.
Bonitasaura also shows that some lines of titanosaurian evolution converged with diplodocids, namely low long skulls without the characteristic nasal arches of other macronarians (such as Brachiosaurus or Camarasaurus) and lower jaws that were squared off and contained comb-like teeth (as in Rebbachisauridae), reversed limb proportions (the front limbs shorter than the hind limbs, unlike the condition in most other macronarians) and rudimentary whiplash tails. It also made the suggestion that the titanosaur Antarctosaurus is a chimera made up of a titanosaurian skull and body and a diplodocoid jaw, as proposed by some authors (McIntosh 1990; Jacobs et al. 1993; Upchurch 1999) less likely.[3][4][1][5]
Palaeopathologies
editMultiple palaeopathologies have been identified from the holotype of B. salgadoi. These include a femoral osteoblastic tumour, an enthesophyte on metatarsal III, and abnormal tissue in a caudal prezygapophysis caused by an infection.[6]
Classification
editBonitasaura was originally classified as a member of Nemegtosauridae in the original description, but subsequent cladistic analyses and description found it to be nested among the titanosaur clade that includes Lognkosauria and Rinconsauria.[7][8] In the description of Chucarosaurus in 2023, Agnolin et al. recovered Bonitasaura as a colossosaurian member of the Titanosauria, as the sister taxon to a clade formed by Chucarosaurus, Notocolossus and the Lognkosauria. The results of their phylogenetic analyses are shown in the cladogram below:[9]
References
edit- ^ a b Apesteguía, S. (2004). Bonitasaura salgadoi gen. et sp. nov.: a beaked sauropod from the Late Cretaceous of Patagonia. Naturwissenschaften, 91(10), 493-497.
- ^ Gallina, P. A. (2011). Notes on the axial skeleton of the titanosaur Bonitasaura salgadoi (Dinosauria-Sauropoda). Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciências, 83(1), 235-246.
- ^ Jacobs, L., Winkler, D. A., Downs, W. R., & Gomani, E. M. (1993). New material of an Early Cretaceous titanosaurid saurepod dinosaur from Malawi. Palaeontology, 36, 523-523.
- ^ McIntosh, J. S. (1990). Species determination in sauropod dinosaurs with tentative suggestions for their classification. In Dinosaur systematics symposium (pp. 53-69).
- ^ Upchurch, P. (1999). The phylogenetic relationships of the Nemegtosauridae (Saurischia, Sauropoda). Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 19(1), 106-125.
- ^ Gonzalez, Romina; Gallina, Pablo A.; Cerda, Ignacio A. (November 2017). "Multiple paleopathologies in the dinosaur Bonitasaura salgadoi (Sauropoda: Titanosauria) from the Upper Cretaceous of Patagonia, Argentina". Cretaceous Research. 79: 159–170. Bibcode:2017CrRes..79..159G. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2017.07.013. hdl:11336/64083. Retrieved 19 April 2024 – via Elsevier Science Direct.
- ^ Gallina & Apesteguí, 2015
- ^ Carballido, J. L., Pol, D., Otero, A., Cerda, I. A., Salgado, L., Garrido, A. C., ... & Krause, J. M. (2017). A new giant titanosaur sheds light on body mass evolution among sauropod dinosaurs. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 284(1860), 20171219.
- ^ Agnolin, Federico L.; Gonzalez Riga, Bernardo J.; Aranciaga Rolando, Alexis M.; Rozadilla, Sebastián; Motta, Matías J.; Chimento, Nicolás R.; Novas, Fernando E. (2023-02-02). "A new giant titanosaur (Dinosauria, Sauropoda) from the Upper Cretaceous of Northwestern Patagonia, Argentina". Cretaceous Research. 146: 105487. Bibcode:2023CrRes.14605487A. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2023.105487. ISSN 0195-6671.