Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T01:36:38.417Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A new elasmosaurid from the early Maastrichtian of Angola and the implications of girdle morphology on swimming style in plesiosaurs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2015

R. Araújo*
Affiliation:
Roy M. Huffington Department of Earth Sciences, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas, 75275, USA Museu da Lourinhã, Rua João Luís de Moura, 2530-157 Lourinhã, Portugal
M.J. Polcyn
Affiliation:
Roy M. Huffington Department of Earth Sciences, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas, 75275, USA
A.S. Schulp
Affiliation:
Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Darwinweg 2, 2333CR Leiden, the Netherlands and Natuurhistorisch Museum Maastricht, Maastricht, the Netherlands and Faculty of Earth and Life Sciences, Amsterdam VU University, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
O. Mateus
Affiliation:
Museu da Lourinhã, Rua João Luís de Moura, 2530-157 Lourinhã, Portugal Universidade Nova de Lisboa, CICEGe, Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia, FCT, 2829-516 Caparica, Portugal
L.L. Jacobs
Affiliation:
Roy M. Huffington Department of Earth Sciences, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas, 75275, USA
A. Olímpio Gonçalves
Affiliation:
Departamento de Geologia, Faculdade de Ciencas, Universidade Agostinho Neto, Avenida 4 de Fevereiro 7, Luanda, Angola
M.-L. Morais
Affiliation:
Departamento de Geologia, Faculdade de Ciencas, Universidade Agostinho Neto, Avenida 4 de Fevereiro 7, Luanda, Angola
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

We report here a new elasmosaurid from the early Maastrichtian at Bentiaba, southern Angola. Phylogenetic analysis places the new taxon as the sister taxon to Styxosaurus snowii, and that clade as the sister of a clade composed of (Hydrotherosaurus alexandrae (Libonectes morgani + Elasmosaurus platyurus)). The new taxon has a reduced dorsal blade of the scapula, a feature unique amongst elasmosaurids, but convergent with cryptoclidid plesiosaurs, and indicates a longitudinal protraction-retraction limb cycle rowing style with simple pitch rotation at the glenohumeral articulation. Morphometric phylogenetic analysis of the coracoids of 40 eosauropterygian taxa suggests that there was a broad range of swimming styles within the clade.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
© Netherlands Journal of Geosciences Foundation 2014 

Introduction

We report here a new elasmosaurid plesiosaur from the early Maastrichtian of Angola, and provide a description and a phylogenetic analysis. The new taxon possesses unusual features of the limb and pectoral girdle morphology that suggest a peculiar mode of locomotion; we therefore also explore the implications of girdle morphology on swimming style in a phylogenetic morphometrics framework.

Plesiosaurs are members of the Eosauropterygia (Rieppel, Reference Rieppel1994), which include pachypleurosaurs, nothosaurs and pistosaurs best known from the Middle Triassic epicontinental shallow seas of Europe and China (Rieppel, Reference Rieppel and Wellnhofer2000). Elasmosauridae are regarded as the sister group of Cryptocleididae within Plesiosauria (Ketchum & Benson, Reference Ketchum and Benson2010; Benson & Druckenmiller, Reference Benson and Druckenmiller2014). The origin of Elasmosauridae is unclear but its record extends from the mid-Hauterivian (Evans, Reference Evans2012) to the end of the Maastrichtian (Vincent et al., Reference Vincent, Bardet, Suberbiola, Bouya, Amaghzaz and Meslouh2011).

By the earliest Jurassic, plesiosaurs were fully adapted to a pelagic lifestyle and two major Bauplans (plesiosauromorph and pliosauromorph) had emerged in multiple phylogenetic lineages (O’Keefe, Reference O’Keefe2001; Benson et al., Reference Benson, Evans and Druckenmiller2012). Plesiosauromorphs have long necks and relatively small, anteriorly abbreviated heads, whereas the pliosauromorph Bauplan includes forms with larger elongate heads and relatively short necks (O’Keefe & Carrano, Reference O’Keefe and Carrano2005). However, all plesiosaurs share unique features of their limbs and girdles amongst secondarily adapted Mesozoic marine reptiles. Swimming style based on paraxial quadrupedal locomotion is largely accepted (e.g. Watson, Reference Watson1924; Robinson, Reference Robinson1975), although details of limb motion are more contentious (e.g. Thewissen & Taylor, Reference Thewissen, Taylor and Hall2007; Lingham-Soliar, Reference Lingham-Soliar2000).

The morphological transition between terrestrial forms, presumably in the early Triassic, to fully marine forms known from the Jurassic and Cretaceous involves profound reorganisation of the girdle elements along with elaboration of the limbs as paddles in a unique body plan without modern analogue. Plesiosaurs likely share a distant relationship with terrestrial sprawlers (Rieppel, Reference Rieppel1997, Reference Rieppel and Wellnhofer2000) and on entry to the marine realm employed paraxial rowing (Schmidt, Reference Schmidt, Reif and Wesphal1984; Storrs, Reference Storrs1986; Lin & Rieppel, Reference Lin and Rieppel1998; for a different opinion see Sues, Reference Sues1987). Within Diapsida, there are two primary modes of aquatic locomotion: limb-based swimming (e.g. turtles, penguins) and trunk-and-tail-based lateral undulation (e.g. varanoids, iguanids, crocodyliforms). Among extant paraxial swimmers there are two main styles: rowing (e.g. trionychid turtles) and underwater flying (e.g. sea turtles). In underwater rowing the main locomotory vector components are protraction and retraction, whereas in underwater flying the main locomotory vector component is adduction and abduction (Carpenter et al., Reference Carpenter, Sanders, Reed, Reed and Larson2010). Within plesiosaurs, both rowing and underwater flying have been proposed (Watson, Reference Watson1924; Robinson, Reference Robinson1975; Carpenter et al., Reference Carpenter, Sanders, Reed, Reed and Larson2010). Araújo & Correia (in press) provide a detailed analysis of the pectoral myology of plesiosaurs.

In this contribution, we first describe the osteology of the new taxon and perform a character-based parsimony analysis to determine its phylogenetic position. We then perform an additional analysis employing a continuously variable morphometric character, a quantification of coracoid shape, to develop a testable model of evolution for this bone in Eosauropterygia. We conclude with a brief discussion of the implications of girdle and limb morphology and musculature variation on swimming style in plesiosaurs.

Materials and methods

Institutional abbreviations

CMN – Canadian Museum of Nature, Ottawa, Canada; IVPP – Institute for Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Beijing, China; KHM – Kaikoura Historical Museum, Kaikoura, New Zealand; MGUAN – Museu de Geologia da Universidade Agostinho Neto, Luanda, Angola; SMF – Forschungsinstitut und Naturmuseum Senckenberg, Frankfurt, Germany; TMM – Texas Memorial Museum, Texas, USA; YPM – Yale Peabody Museum, New Haven, USA.

Materials

MGUAN PA103 (Figs 2 and 3), complete pectoral and pelvic girdle, cervical and dorsal vertebrae, partial forelimb (humerus, radius and ulna and isolated phalanges) and several dorsal ribs. MGUAN PA270 (Mateus et al., Reference Mateus, Polcyn, Jacobs, Araújo, Schulp, Marinheiro, Pereira and Vineyard2012, Figure 11), pubis, ischium, femur and completely articulated posterior limb.

Fig. 1. A. Geographical location of the locality in Angola. B. Geological context and stratigraphic column with the position of Bench 19, the layer which produced the specimens described herein.

Fig. 2. MGUAN PA103 vertebral elements. A. Sequence of posterior cervical vertebrae and rib. B. Anterior cervical vertebra. C. Dorsal rib. D. Dorsal vertebra.

Phylogeny

Phylogenetic analyses of the new taxon used the data matrix of 177 characters and 67 taxa modified from Ketchum & Benson (Reference Ketchum and Benson2010), with the nothosaurid Cymatosaurus, as the outgroup. Codings can be found in the Appendix. The analysis was run in TNT v1.1 (Goloboff et al., Reference Goloboff, Farris and Nixon2008) with 20 independent hits using the defaults of ‘xmult’ command and 10 cycles of tree drifting (Goloboff et al., Reference Goloboff, Farris and Nixon2008). Tree Fuse was run with 22 replicates and over 1 × 109 rearrangements. A single parsimonious tree was retrieved with a tree length of 1136.78. Resampling scores were calculated using 100 replications of symmetric resampling (Goloboff et al., Reference Goloboff, Farris, Källersjö, Oxelman, Ramírez and Szumika2003). Each data set was analysed with a single addition and the resulting tree collapsed with tree bisection reconnection (TBR) (Goloboff & Farris, Reference Goloboff and Farris2001). Group supports were calculated by TBR-swapping the trees, and registering of the number of steps needed to unite a clade. Both absolute (Bremer, Reference Bremer1994) and relative Bremer supports are presented (Goloboff & Farris, Reference Goloboff and Farris2001). Continuous characters (both meristic and non-meristic) were analysed as such (Goloboff et al., Reference Goloboff, Mattoni and Quinteros2006), i.e. ranges and ratios were plotted in the matrix with the actual values, without the need to create arbitrary groupings. Vincent et al. (2011) matrix was also coded and is 67 characters × 22 taxa, focused particularly on elasmosaurid taxa (10 out of 23). The outgroup included the pachypleurosaur Serpianosaurus and the nothosaur Simosaurus.

Phylogenetics morphometrics

In order to develop a testable model of morphological evolution of the coracoid, we also performed a phylogenetic morphometric analysis following the methods of Catalano et al. (Reference Catalano, Goloboff and Giannini2010) and Goloboff & Catalano (Reference Goloboff and Catalano2011). Phylogenetic morphometrics employs Farris optimisation by applying parsimony analysis to 2D or 3D spatial continuum (Catalano et al., Reference Catalano, Goloboff and Giannini2010) using homologous landmarks. A set of landmarks is regarded as a single character by the algorithm. In this case, one character with 14 landmarks was used, forming the character ‘outline shape of the right coracoid in ventral view’. Forty pachypleurosaur, nothosaur, pistosaur and plesiosaur taxa were scored. For further information see Supplementary Material.

Systematic paleontology

SAUROPTERYGIA Owen, 1860

EOSAUROPTERYGIA Rieppel, Reference Rieppel1994

PLESIOSAURIA de Blainville, Reference de Blainville1835

ELASMOSAURIDAE Cope, Reference Cope1869 sensu Ketchum & Benson, Reference Ketchum and Benson2010

Cardiocorax mukulu gen. et sp. nov.

Holotype – MGUAN PA103, complete pectoral and pelvic girdle, cervical and dorsal vertebrae, partial forelimb (humerus, radius and ulna, and isolated phalanges) and several dorsal ribs.

Referred specimen – MGAUN PA270 is a more incomplete specimen preserving a pelvic girdle and a single hind limb in articulation. This specimen was found in the same horizon at about 7 m from the holotype.

Etymology – Genus name refers to the heart-shaped fenestra between the coracoids derived from the Latinised Greek Kardia and Latinised Greek corax, meaning raven or crow, which also gives rise to the name ‘coracoid’. The species name mukulu means ‘ancestor’ in Angolan Bantu dialects.

Locality and horizon – Southern Angola, Namibe Province, Bentiaba, Bench 19 (Fig. 1), Mocuio Formation of the São Nicolau Group (Cooper, Reference Cooper2003), Namibe Basin (Jacobs et al., Reference Jacobs, Mateus, Polcyn, Schulp, Antunes, Morais and Tavares2006). Strganac et al. (2014) reports the age of this interval (Bench 19) as early Maastrichtian (71.40–71.64 Ma).

Fig. 3. MGUAN PA103 pectoral and limb elements. A. Pectoral girdle in ventral view. B. Forelimb elements as preserved. C. Left scapula in dorsal view. D. Left pelvic girdle in dorsal and ventral views. Bf, bone fragments; G, glenoid; H, humerus; Icl, interclavicle; Icv, intercoracoid vacuity; lc; left coracoid; Lcl, left clavicle; Pi, pisiform; Pp, postaxial process; R, radius; Ra, radiale; rc, right coracoid; Sdb, scapula dorsal blade; U, ulna; Icl, interclavicle; rs, right scapula; lcv, intercoracoid vacuity.

DiagnosisCardiocorax mukulu is characterised by the following autapomorphies: coracoid, bilateral ventral buttress of the coracoid asymmetrical; scapula, highly reduced dorsal blade of the scapula, medial contact between scapulae and clavicles extending along all of their medial surface, scapular shaft with ellipsoid cross-section broadly splaying anteriorly; clavicle, clavicular ventral area nearly as broad as the scapular area, median contact between clavicles extend along all their medial length; cervical vertebrae, the posterior cervical neural spines have an angled apex, the posterior cervical neural spines nearly touch its adjacent neural spines, transversally broad neural spines: length of base of neural spines slightly smaller to centrum length.

Description

The holotype (MGUAN PA103) preserves five cervical and one dorsal vertebrae, proximal portions of dorsal ribs, the complete pectoral and pelvic girdles, and a partial forelimb (humerus, radius and ulna, and isolated phalanges). Preservation is generally good, with little or no plastic deformation, but exhibits some recent weathering. Referred specimen MGUAN PA270 is a more complete articulated limb and pelvic girdle, and augments the description of these elements.

Vertebrae and ribs

A continuous series of five complete cervical vertebrae and one anterior cervical lacking the neural spine and neural arch, and one dorsal centrum (Fig. 2) are preserved in MGUAN PA 103. The first isolated cervical preserved has a binocular-shaped articular facet. The vertebral centrum has a lateral longitudinal ridge and a ventral keel at mid-height and mid-width, respectively. The foramina subcentralia perforate from the ventral to the dorsal side of the vertebra and are surrounded by a broader ventral concavity. The neural arch arises slightly medial to the articular facet. The circular articular facets are visible in posterior cervicals. The lateral keel is visible in one posterior cervical that extends along the dorsal third of the centrum, being more prominent on the posterior half of the centrum. The centra are slightly amphicoelus with a thickened rim surrounding the outer region of the articular facet. Because of poor preservation the ventral foramina subcentralia cannot be seen. Single-headed, transversally flattened ribs are attached on the centra ventrolaterally, tapering posteriorly and lacking anterior processes. The neural spines are blade-like, much narrower than the centra, but at the level of the neural arches they are only slightly narrower than the width of the centrum. Because of post-mortem crushing it is impossible to determine the shape of the neural canal. The neural spines are broad anteroposteriorly to the base and are completely fused to the centra, although fractured at the base of the neural spine. The dorsal border of the neural spine is remarkably angled dorsally. The dorsal portion of the neural spines is further elaborated with anterior and posterior projections at their mid-height. Thus, the neural spines touch those adjacent, forming a tear-shaped void (Fig. 2). The posterior cervical neural spines nearly touch adjacent neural spines, a condition readily distinguished from that of Callawayasurus, which despite a small posterior projection near the neural spine apex has a clear separation between cervicals. No dorsoventral bending occurs among cervicals such as seen in the posterior section of the cervical vertebrae in Albertonectes (Kubo et al., Reference Kubo, Mitchell and Henderson2012). A posterior projection on the neural spine is also seen in Callawayasaurus (Welles, Reference Welles1962), but the anterior projection is autapomorphic for this taxon (see Supplementary Material). Despite some breakage it is still possible to conclude that a posterior increase in height of the neural spines is not present. The zygapophyses are horizontal relative to the sagittal plane, unlike Futabasaurus, Albertonectes and Terminonatator. The postzygapophysis is flat and steeply inclined dorsolaterally in posterior view, fitting with the same angle on the prezygapophysis of the following vertebra. All centra are longer than they are high.

The dorsal centrum is acoelus, being wider compared to the length and height. In lateral view, the articulation for the neural arch is well marked. The articulation for the neural arch forms two broad ellipsoid surfaces in dorsal view. The ventral surface is perforated by two pairs of foramina subcentralia. The dorsal ribs have a small constriction around the head and taper ventrally. The single articular facet of the ribs is mediolaterally ellipsoidal.

Pectoral girdle

Pectoral girdle elements from a single individual (MGUAN PA103) were found mostly articulated except for the right scapula, which is displaced and overlaps the right coracoid (Fig. 3). The preglenoid portion of the pectoral girdle is sub-equal in size to the postglenoid portion of the pectoral girdle (Figs 3 and 4). The longitudinal pectoral bar is formed by the coracoid, scapula and clavicle, making a continuous slight prominence along the ventral surface, which is an unusual condition in elasmosaurids (e.g. Callawayasaurus, Wapuskanectes, Hidrotherosaurus, Aphrosaurus). The lateral scapulacoracoid contact (i.e. not the glenoid facet) has one distinct triangular facet for the articulation between the coracoid and scapula.

Fig. 4. Portion of recovered topology showing relationships of Cardiocorax mukulu. See text and Supplementary Material Figures 1 and 2 for detailed results.

The coracoid is a flat bone and, as in other plesiosaurs, is thickest around the glenoid. Both preglenoid projections are complete and undistorted. The preglenoid projection of the coracoid is short and narrow, and although it clearly surpasses the anterior margin of the scapular facet, it diverges slightly laterally, but to a lesser extent than the condition in Trinacromerum brownorum, which is distinctly angled (Thurmond, Reference Thurmond1968). The shape and proportions of the preglenoid projection resemble that of an unnamed elasmosaurid from the Lowest Maastrichtian CMN9454 from Canada (Sato & Wu, Reference Sato and Wu2006), but is shorter than in the Albian elasmosaurid Wapuskanectes (Druckenmiller & Russell, Reference Druckenmiller and Russell2006) from Canada. The Aphrosaurus preglenoid projection is very short (Welles, Reference Welles1943) and it is nearly non-existent in an aristonectine elasmosaurid from Angola (Reference Araújo, Lindgren, Polcyn, Jacobs, Schulp and MateusAraújo et al., in press) or Hydrotherosaurus (Welles, Reference Welles1943). There is an asymmetrical ventral buttress of the coracoids with the right coracoid overlapping the left with a lip of bone, unlike the symmetrical ventral buttress in Wapuskanectes or Mauisaurus. This is not a result of post-mortem distortion because, despite a small horizontal crack, even without repositioning there is clearly a lip of bone that overlaps dorsally. The medial posterior process tapers considerably and is much shorter than the anterior process of the coracoid. The coracoid possesses well-defined posterior cornua, giving a cordiform appearance to the intercoracoid foramen, also present in Wapuskanectes and Styxosaurus. The posterior intercoracoid symphysis forms a 10-cm long contact between the posteromedial processes, unlike most elasmosaurids. There are no median coracoid perforations, as seen in Leptocleidia (e.g. Benson & Druckenmiller, Reference Benson and Druckenmiller2014). The postero-lateral coracoid wings, as seen in late Cretaceous polycotylids and to some extent in some elasmosaurids, such as cf. Aristonectes (TMM43445-1), are gentle projections formed by the lateral and posterior borders. The lateral border is concave posterior to the glenoid and the posterior convex as in Plesiosaurus (Owen, Reference Owen1883; Storrs, Reference Storrs, Callaway and Nicholls1997) and Leptocleidus (Andrews, Reference Andrews1922), and many elasmosaurids (e.g. Hydrotherosaurus, Aphrosaurus, Albertonectes). Dolichorhynchops possesses a concave lateral border and straight posterior border. The extremities of the bone exhibit a rugose pattern punctuated by several nutrient foramina.

Both scapulae are present in MGUAN PA103, although the left is slightly displaced and rotated, and the right significantly displaced and overlying the right coracoid. Although the scapula exhibits the typical triradiate shape (e.g. Andrews, Reference Andrews1910), the reduced dorsal blade of the scapula contrasts with its broad ventral area. This is an unusual feature for elasmosaurids (Figs 3 and 4, and a similar but more conservative condition in an unnamed elasmosaurid CM Zfr145; Hiller et al., Reference Hiller, Mannering, Jones and Cruickshank2005). The median contact between the scapulae extends along its entire anteroposterior length. The medial coracoscapular contact is reduced and only the tip of the posterior process of the scapula contacts the coracoid medially, enclosing a large coracoid ‘foramen’ (for homology see Reference Araújo and CorreiaAraújo & Correia, in press). The scapular shaft is thick, ellipsoid in cross-section and splays anteriorly into a flat and thin plate of bone. The anterior edge of the scapula is concave and forms an acute angle laterally. The dorsal blade of the scapula arises laterally from the scapular shaft. The dorsal blade angles posteriorly, is 5–7 cm long and tapers to a blunt apex. The glenoid face and the medial coracoscapular contact are subtriangular and rugose.

The ventral area of the scapula nearly equals the area of the clavicle, a condition not yet observed in elasmosaurids and other plesiosaurians (e.g. Thalassomedon, Morenosaurus, Albertonectes, Callawayasaurus). The clavicle is a large, flat bone, subtriangular in shape and with a blunt anterior apex. The shape of the clavicle is unique among plesiosaurs (in contrast with, for example, Futabasaurus, Albertonectes and Thalassomedon dentonensis). It contacts its counterpart medially along its entire length. Ventrally, a small medial lip of bone projects posteriorly, partially enveloping the anterior border of the scapula. Anteriorly it contacts the interclavicle, which is poorly preserved.

Forelimb

The humerus of MGUAN PA103 possesses a postaxial protuberance that is not present in the femora of other known plesiosaur taxa. The preaxial and postaxial borders of the humerus are nearly straight (Fig. 3). The postaxial border bears a protuberance at mid-shaft. The proximal is damaged but spherical in shape. The distal end bears two distinct epipodial facets. The preaxial border of the ulna is concave. A supernumerary element articulates on the distal lateral facet of the ulna. The radius is wider than long, rectangular and articulates with a very wide radiale anteriorly.

Pelvic girdle

A complete pelvic girdle and hindlimb (MGUAN PA270) referred here to Cardiocorax mukulu n. gen. et sp. was originally figured by Mateus et al. (2012, their Figure 11). The pubis and ischium are similar in morphology, proportions and size compared to the holotype specimen (MGUAN PA103), and only differs in having a more rounded anterior border and a more deeply concave lateral border of the pubis. These differences can be easily accounted for by intraspecific variation. The right ilium is missing, and all other elements are fractured but complete (Fig. 3). The median symphysis between left and right portions extends from the anterior edge of the pubis to the anteroposterior midpoint of the ischium and forms a median pelvic bar. In Futabasaurus an incipient median pelvic bar forms a diamond-shaped fenestra at the articulation of both halves of the girdle (Sato et al., Reference Sato, Hasegawa and Manabe2006), but in MGUAN PA103 the median pelvic bar is completely connected, forming a straight structure, as in Libonectes and Elasmosaurus.

The pubis forms a sinuosity along the anterolateral border and the medial edge of the pubis is straight. The anterior surface of the pubis is not notched; rather it is gently angled in the median portion of the anterior surface. A flared lateral extension of the pubis as seen in Mauisaurus haasti (KHM N99-1079; Hiller et al., Reference Hiller, Mannering, Jones and Cruickshank2005) and Terminonatator (Sato, Reference Sato2003), and a small well-defined notch on the lateral edge of the pubis (Bardet et al., Reference Bardet, Fernández, García-Ramos, Suberbiola, Piñuela, Ruiz-Omeñaca and Vincent2008) is present in MGUAN PA103. The posterior surface of the pubis has well-defined flat facets for the femur, whereas the facet for the ischium is gently concave and an oval shape with the more acute curve on the lateral side.

Although an elliptical cross-section is discernible, it is not possible to determine the relative proportions of the distal and proximal facets of the ilium because the distal facet is not entirely preserved. The ilium is not twisted but curved (Storrs, Reference Storrs, Callaway and Nicholls1997), but because of the symmetry of the element and the absence of facets it is impossible to discern the curvature direction. The ilium has a blunt and flattened proximal end, but again it is impossible to discern the flattening direction.

Hindlimb

In MGUAN PA270 (Mateus et al., Reference Mateus, Polcyn, Jacobs, Araújo, Schulp, Marinheiro, Pereira and Vineyard2012; their Figure 11), a nearly complete, semi-articulated hindlimb is present and articulated with the pelvis. The femur is proximally formed by a hemispherical cap-itulum separated by an isthmus sloping into a flat D-shaped tuberculum. The shaft of the femur is cylindrical with a ventral roughening at mid-shaft for muscle attachment. The shaft flares distally and forms three distinct facets. No supernumeraries were found in articulation with the posterior paddle, but there seems to be an articulation facet on the postaxial side of the femur. The flared distal portion of the femur has deep longitudinal striations for muscle attachment. The tibia is broader than long. The medial margins of the tibia and fibula are concave, whereas the distal and proximal margins are straight. The calcaneum and centrale are preserved and in situ but the astragalus is missing. Estimates are made difficult by the taphonomic displacement of some of the digits, but the minimum phalangeal formula is I-7, II-8, III-8, IV-8, V-7.

Results

Character-based parsimony analysis

Phylogenetic analysis produced a single parsimonious tree of 1136.78 steps (Fig. 4). The analysis recovered Cardiocorax mukulu as the sister taxon to Styxosaurus snowii, and that clade as the sister of a clade composed of (Hydrotherosaurus alexandrae (Libonectes morgani + Elasmosaurus platyurus)). These taxa collectively form the most derived elasmosaurid clade. Elasmosauridae is strongly supported by Bremer indices and GC values, and are united by short and distally wide femur (character 175), and the premaxilla completely splits the frontals and contacts the parietals (character 10 state 2). Unequivocal characters supporting the position of C. mukulu include the ventrally notched anterior articular face of the cervical centra (Ketchum & Benson, Reference Ketchum and Benson2010, 122:1) and the anteromedial margin of the coracoid contacts the scapula (Ketchum & Benson, Reference Ketchum and Benson2010, 150: 1), despite convergency with non-elasmosaurid plesiosaurs such as Plesiosaurus or Thalassiodracon. The formation of the coracoid embayment is also another elasmosaurid apomorphy, present in Cardiocorax and noted in a previous phylogenetic analysis (e.g. Ketchum & Benson, Reference Ketchum and Benson2010).

Morphometrics-based parsimony analysis

Our phylogenetics morphometrics analysis (see Catalano et al., Reference Catalano, Goloboff and Giannini2010) of the coracoid shape recovered a topology consistent with the most generally recognised Eosauropterygia clades, and thus provides a possible evolutionary model for the coracoid (Fig. 5a). Within Plesiosauria, two clearly distinctive morphotypes emerged: the Elasmosauridae morphotype with the formation of an intercoracoid vacuity and the Polycotylidaemorphotype with a long preglenoid projection and posterior cornu.

Fig. 5. Results of phylogenetic morphometric analysis. A. Preferred tree. Landmark scores for each landmark using (B) heuristic and (C) RFTRA search methods. D. Comparison of the overall tree score between the heuristic and RFTRA method. See Supplementary Material Figures 4–13 for all recovered trees.

Although resistant fit theta-rho analysis (RFTRA) as a re-aligning method provided a better tree score at the lowest level of search thoroughness (4.8), at higher levels the heuristic minimisation of differences method performed considerably better, with a tree score of 4.2 (Fig. 5d). At the levels of thoroughness 3 and 4, the tree score was similar to the re-aligning method by heuristic minimisation of differences. Yet, for individual landmark scores, the heuristic minimisation of differences method was less consistent relative to RFTRA (contrast Fig. 5b and c), which showed close individual landmark scores at all levels of thoroughness. The best tree score was achieved with heuristic minimisation of differences for the levels of thoroughness 3 (Fig. 5d) and 4. However, the tree that best mirrors generally accepted relationships in Eosauropterygia was calculated using heuristic minimisation of differences with the level of thoroughness 3. Additional trees are included in the Supplementary Material.

Discussion

In Fig. 6 we present a model of pectoral girdle evolution in Eosauropterygia. In basal forms we see major reduction of the clavicle, reduction of the coracoid buttresses, reduction of the dorsal blade and general ventralisation of the scapula, horizontal orientation of the coracoid, and formation of the clavicular-scapular arch. At the level of Pistosauria, we see high morphological disparity of the coracoid. After the Late Triassic morphological gap, we see formation of a large coracoid foramen, medial migration of the medial coracoid-scapula contact, expansion of the postglenoid projection, and a weakening of the scapular-clavicular articulation. Within pliosaurids, we see retention of a relatively conservative pectoral girdle with broad medial contact of the coracoids. In polycotylids there is a novel development of the posterior coracoid wings, but the scapula remains moderately expanded ventrally. Within elasmosaurids, we see the formation of the intercoracoid vacuity and in late elasmosaurs, extreme ventral development of the sca-pula and clavicle, formation of an extensive longitudinal pectoral bar and nearly complete elimination of the dorsal process of the scapula.

Fig. 6. Patterns of pectoral girdle evolution in Eosauropterygia. See text and Supplementary Material for discussion.

These evolutionary novelties are broadly correlated with optimisation of aquatic locomotion from terrestrial basal neodiapsid ancestors. However, notwithstanding the general model developed by Carpenter et al. (Reference Carpenter, Sanders, Reed, Reed and Larson2010), significant differences in girdle and limb morphology in Plesiosauria suggest that different clades may have employed variations of rowing and underwater flying. The area of muscle attachments on the girdle elements reflects both the dominant direction and magnitude of forces that are applied to the limbs. The glenoid architecture should reflect motion to the extent the glenoid must resist forces applied to the limb and thus should also reflect the dominant motion vectors (i.e. protraction and retraction vectors). This is contrary to the reasoning of Carpenter et al. (Reference Carpenter, Sanders, Reed, Reed and Larson2010), who suggested limb motion was greatest in the vectors defined by least restriction in the glenoid (i.e. adduction and abduction). Thus, an understanding of the myology, proportions of the limb and the glenoid architecture across the broader clade is critical to infer swimming styles and variation in stroke geometry.

The osteological correlates of muscles attachment sites define area and at times direction (Reference Araújo and CorreiaAraújo & Correia, in press) and thus reflect to some degree the magnitude and vector of muscle forces. When examined within a system like the forelimb and pectoral girdle, the interaction of these forces and vectors yields clues to the kinematics of that system. In basal neodiapsids, the levator scapulae, the serratus and the scapulodeltoideus originate on the dorsal blade of the scapula (Holmes, Reference Holmes1977). The areas of attachment of these muscles are reduced in Eosauropterygia because the lifestyle in a buoyant aquatic medium does not require, to the same extent, limb support musculature (Lin & Rieppel, Reference Lin and Rieppel1998). Other secondarily-adapted paraxial swimmers, such as penguins (Schreiweis, Reference Schreiweis1982) and pinnipeds (Murie, Reference Murie1871), also show selective limb muscle reduction and expansion. However, Cardiocorax demonstrates an extreme case of reduction of the levator scapulae, scapulodeltoideus and serratus in which the ventral area of attachment in the scapula is 14 times greater than the area of attachment on the dorsal blade.

The ratio of the coracoid area versus the total length of the individuals and the ratio of coracoid area versus the ventral area of the scapula is clearly contrasted in Cretaceous plesiosaurs, with policotylids and elasmosaurids being separated (Fig. 7a and b). This is indicative of the different swimming styles between these two clades, namely the use of the coracobrachialis and clavodeltoideus muscle (Reference Araújo and CorreiaAraújo & Correia, in press). The average ratio between the dorsal blade area and the ventral surface in the sampled Eosauropterygia is 3.3 and in Elasmosauridae is 3.6 (Fig. 7c). The variation of almost an order of magnitude within the same family reflects the particular locomotory patterns of Cardiocorax. Typically for diapsids the levator scapulae and the scapulohumeralis insert directly on the dorsal portion of the scapula (Russell & Bauer, Reference Russell, Bauer, Gans, Gaunt and Adler2008). Basal cryptoclidids (sensu Ketchum & Benson, Reference Ketchum and Benson2010) also have high ratios of the dorsal blade area and the ventral surface of the scapula (average 7.6), and Cryptocleidus eurymerus has a ratio of 10 (Fig. 7c). By this measure, the scapular muscles in basal cryptoclidids and Cardiocorax are comparable. Cardiocorax has a highly proximodistally reduced and distally expanded humerus (Fig. 3), rivaled only by Cryptocleidus (ratio is 0.3) among Eosauropterygia (Fig. 7d). However, the shortening of the humerus is a common trend among marine mammals (Fish, Reference Fish1996) and marine turtles (Renous et al., Reference Renous, de Brain, Depecker, Davenport, Bels, Wyneken, Godfrey and Bel2008). The members of the Elasmosauridae possess the most derived condition of this aquatic adaptation (Fig. 7d) in having the lowest humeral ratio values (average is 1.4) among Eosauropterygia (average is 2.0). Along those lines, the radius ratio also tends to diminish along the evolution of the clade (Fig. 7e).

Fig. 7. Morphometric pectoral girdle variables against time. A. Ratio of the coracoid area versus the total length of the individual. Note the constrasting values between polycotylids and elasmosaurids, convergent with the ratios on pachypleurosaurids. B. Ratio of the coracoid area versus the ventral area of the scapula. Note the similar ratios for elasmosaurids and cryptocleidids. C. Ratio of the ventral area of the scapula versus the dorsal blade of the scapula area. Note the outlier position of Cardiocorax, only comparable with that of cryptocleidids. D. Humerus ratio, length versus distal width. Note the tendency in Eosauropterygia for increasing massiveness of the propodials, a trend convergent with various secondarily-adapted organisms; E. Radius ratio, length versus distal width. As for the propodials the epipodials also tend to increase in massiveness to increase the mechanical advantage of locomotor muscles and paddle stabilisers. See Supplementary Material Tables 1–3.

The extreme distal expansion of the Cardiocorax with a doubly faceted distal border provides a broad articulation for interlocking zeugopodials (Fig. 3), a feature shared with Cryptocleidus. Similarly, Cardiocorax has a shortened radius (0.77 ratio) comparable only to other Late Cretaceous polycotylids such as Dolichorhynchops and Edgarosaurus (Fig. 7d and e). Cardiocorax’ shortened propodials and zeugopodials would have increased mechanical advantage of the extrinsic musculature inserting on the girdle for increased leverage (Reference Araújo and CorreiaAraújo & Correia, in press). To cope with the force imparted by the muscles, the coracoids meet extensively posteriorly and there is a broad median contact between the scapulae and clavicles. Additionally, the contact between the clavicle and scapula is broad. The pectoral girdle is strengthened by the left–right asymmetric ventral buttress of the coracoid. Plesiosaurs have a thickened glenoidal portion of the coracoid, but a marked ventral buttress is most evident in Elasmosauridae and facilitates bending resistance between the two sides of the pectoral girdle. Cardiocorax pectoral and pelvic girdles present a structural extreme for quadrupedal subaqueous locomotion. The reduction of the attachment area of the dorsal blade of the scapula versus the expansion of the attachment area of the ventral area in Cardiocorax indicates atrophy of muscle groups that were primitively involved in terrestrial locomotion and, on the other hand, expansion of other muscle groups involved in quadrupedal subaquatic locomotion. Thus, the peculiar Cardiocorax pectoral girdle architecture has functional implications. The subequal coracoid ventral area and the clavicle and scapula ventral area, plus the reduced dorsal blade of the scapula, seem to be more compatible with a protraction-retraction limb cycle with change of the flipper pitch than with a figure eight limb cycle previously proposed for plesiosaurs (Robinson, Reference Robinson1975).

Supplementary Material

Supplementary material for this paper available on: http://dx.doi.org/S0016774614000444

Acknowledgments

The first author dedicates this article to the memory of his brother. This publication results from ProjectoPaleoAngola, an international cooperative research effort among the contributing authors and their institutions, funded by the National Geographic Society, the Petroleum Research Fund of the American Chemical Society, Sonangol EP, Esso Angola, Fundação Vida of Angola, LS Films, Maersk, Damco, Safmarine, ISEM at SMU, the Royal Dutch Embassy in Luanda, TAP Airlines, Royal Dutch Airlines and the Saurus Institute. We thank Margarida Ventura and André Buta-Neto for providing our team with help in the field. Tako and Henriette Koning provided valuable support and friendship in Angola.

Appendix

Codings for Ketchum & Benson (Reference Ketchum and Benson2010)

Cardiocorax mukulu ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 1 1 1 1 2 1 2 0 2 ? 1 1 1 ? 0 ? ? 1 2 ? ? 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 ? 1.3 ? 1 0 1 1 1 ? 0.77 1 1 ? ? 1 0 0 1 1 1 1.27 0 ? ? ? ?

Codings for Vincent et al. (Reference Vincent, Bardet, Suberbiola, Bouya, Amaghzaz and Meslouh2011)

Cardiocorax mukulu ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 0 ? 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 ? 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 ? ?

References

Andrews, C.W., 1910. A Catalogue of the Marine Reptiles of the Oxford Clay, Part I. British Museum (Natural History) (London): 205 pp. Google Scholar
Andrews, C.W., 1922. Description of a new plesiosaur from the Weald Clay of Berwick (Sussex). Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 78: 285295.Google Scholar
Araújo, R. & Correia, F., in press. Soft-tissue anatomy of the plesiosaur pectoral girdle inferred from basal Eosauropterygia taxa and the extant phylogenetic bracket. Palaeontologia Electronica.Google Scholar
Araújo, R., Lindgren, J., Polcyn, M.J., Jacobs, L.L., Schulp, A.S. & Mateus, O., accepted. Elasmosaurid plesiosaur material from Angola and the effects of paedomorphism in plesiosaurs. Netherlands Journal of Geosciences.Google Scholar
Bardet, N., Fernández, M., García-Ramos, J.C., Suberbiola, X.P., Piñuela, L., Ruiz-Omeñaca, J.I. & Vincent, P., 2008. A juvenile plesiosaur from the Pliensbachian (Lower Jurassic) of Asturias, Spain. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 28: 258263.Google Scholar
Benson, R.B.J. & Druckenmiller, P.S., 2014. Faunal turnover of marine tetrapods during the Jurassic–Cretaceous transition. Biological Reviews 89: 123. doi: 10.1111/brv.12038.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Benson, R.B.J., Evans, M. & Druckenmiller, P.S., 2012. High Diversity, Low Disparity and Small Body Size in Plesiosaurs (Reptilia, Sauropterygia) from the Triassic–Jurassic Boundary. PLoS ONE 7(3): e31838. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0031838.Google Scholar
Bremer, K., 1994. Branch support and tree stability. Cladistics 10: 295304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carpenter, K., Sanders, F., Reed, B., Reed, J. & Larson, P., 2010. Plesiosaur swimming as interpreted from skeletal analysis and experimental results. Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science 113: 134.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Catalano, S.A., Goloboff, P. & Giannini, N., 2010. Phylogenetic morphometrics (I): the use of landmark data in a phylogenetic framework. Cladistics 26: 539549.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, M.R., 2003. Upper Cretaceous (Turonian-Coniacian) ammonites from São Nicolau, Angola. Annals of the South African Museum 110: 89146.Google Scholar
Cope, E.D., 1869. Synopsis of the extinct Batrachia and Reptilia of North America. Transactions of the North American Philosophical Society 14: 1252.Google Scholar
de Blainville, H.D., 1835. Description de quelques espèces de reptiles de la Californie, précédée de l’analyse d’un système général d’Erpétologie et d’Amphibiologie. Nouvelles Annales Musée (national) d’Histoire Naturelle Paris 4: 233296.Google Scholar
Druckenmiller, P.S. & Russell, A.P., 2006. A new elasmosaurid plesiosaur (Reptilia: Sauropterygia) from the Lower Cretaceous Clearwater Formation, Northeastern Alberta, Canada. Paludicola 5: 184199.Google Scholar
Evans, M., 2012. A new genus of plesiosaur (Reptilia: Sauropterygia) from the Pliensbachian (Early Jurassic) of England, and a phylogeny of the Plesiosauria. PhD thesis, University of Leicester: 397 pp. Google Scholar
Fish, F., 1996. Transitions from drag-based to lift-based propulsion in mammalian swimming. American Zoology 36: 628641.Google Scholar
Goloboff, P.A. & Farris, J.S., 2001. Methods for Quick Consensus estimation. Cladistics 17: S26S34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goloboff, P.A. & Catalano, S.A., 2011. Phylogenetic morphometrics (II): algorithms for landmark optimization. Cladistics 2: 4251.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goloboff, P.A., Farris, J.S., Källersjö, M., Oxelman, B., Ramírez, M.J. & Szumika, C.A., 2003. Improvements to resampling measures of group support. Cladistics 19: 324332.Google Scholar
Goloboff, P.A., Mattoni, C.I. & Quinteros, A.S., 2006. Continuous characters analyzed as such. Cladistics 22: 589601.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Goloboff, P.A., Farris, J.S. & Nixon, K.C., 2008. TNT, a free program for phylogenetic analysis. Cladistics 24: 774786.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hiller, N., Mannering, A., Jones, C.M. & Cruickshank, A.R.I., 2005. The nature of Mauisaurus haasti Hector, 1874 (Reptilia: Plesiosauria). Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 25: 588601.Google Scholar
Holmes, R., 1977. The osteology and musculature of the pectoral limb of small captorhinids. Journal of Morphology 152: 101140.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jacobs, L.L., Mateus, O., Polcyn, M.J., Schulp, A.S., Antunes, M.T., Morais, M.L. & Tavares, T.S., 2006. The occurrence and geological setting of Cretaceous dinosaurs, mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, and turtles from Angola. Journal of the Paleontological Society of Korea 22: 91110.Google Scholar
Ketchum, H.F. & Benson, R.B.J., 2010. Global interrelationships of Plesiosauria (Reptilia, Sauropterygia) and the pivotal role of taxon sampling in determining the outcome of phylogenetic analyses. Biological Reviews 85: 361392.Google Scholar
Kubo, T., Mitchell, M.T. & Henderson, D.M., 2012. Albertonectes vanderveldei, a new elasmosaur (Reptilia, Sauropterygia) from the Upper Cretaceous of Alberta. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 32: 557572.Google Scholar
Lin, K. & Rieppel, O., 1998. Functional Morphology and Ontogeny of Keichousaurus hui (Reptilia, Sauropterygia). Fieldiana (Geology), New Series 39: 135.Google Scholar
Lingham-Soliar, T., 2000. Plesiosaur locomotion: is the four-wing problem real or merely an a theoretical exercise? Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie, Abhandlungen 217: 4587.Google Scholar
Mateus, O., Polcyn, M.J., Jacobs, L.L., Araújo, R., Schulp, A.S., Marinheiro, J., Pereira, B. & Vineyard, D., 2012. Cretaceous amniotes from Angola: dinosaurs, pterosaurs, mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, and turtles. Sala de los Infantes 71105.Google Scholar
Murie, J., 1871. Researches upon the anatomy of the Pinnipedia – Part II. Descriptive anatomy of the sea-lion (Otariajubata). Zoological Society of London Transactions 7: 527596.Google Scholar
O’Keefe, F.R., 2001. A cladistic analysis and taxonomic revision of the Plesiosauria (Reptilia: Sauropterygia). Acta Zoologica Fennica 213: 163.Google Scholar
O’Keefe, F.R. & Carrano, M.T., 2005, Correlated trends in the evolution of the plesiosaur locomotor system. Paleobiology 31: 656675.Google Scholar
Owen, R., 1883. On generic characters in the order Sauropterygia. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society 39: 133138.Google Scholar
Renous, S., de Brain, F.L., Depecker, M., Davenport, J. & Bels, V., 2008. Evolution of locomotion in aquatic turtles. In: Wyneken, J., Godfrey, M.H., Bel, V. (eds): Biology of Turtles. Taylor & Francis Group (Boca Raton): 97138.Google Scholar
Rieppel, O., 1994. Osteology of Simosaurus gaillardoti and the Relationships of Stem-Group Sauropterygia. Fieldiana Geology, New Series 28: 185.Google Scholar
Rieppel, O., 1997. Revision of the sauropterygian reptile genus Cymatosaurus v. Fritsch, 1894, and the relationships of Germanosaurus Nopcsa, from the Middle Triassic of Europe. Fieldiana (Geology), New Series 36: 138.Google Scholar
Rieppel, O., 2000. Sauropterygia I: Placodontia, Pachypleurosauria, Nothosauria, Piatosauroidea. In: Wellnhofer, P. (ed.): Encyclopedia of Palaeoherpetology, Vol. 12A. Pfeil (Munich): 134 pp.Google Scholar
Robinson, J.A., 1975. The locomotion of plesiosaurs. Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie, Abhandlungen 149: 286332.Google Scholar
Russell, A.P. & Bauer, A., 2008. The appendicular locomotor apparatus of Sphenodon and normal-limbed squamates. In: Gans, C., Gaunt, A.S., Adler, K. (eds): Biology of the Reptilia, vol. 21 (The skull and appendicular locomotor apparatus of Lapidosauria). Society for the study of amphibians and reptiles, Ithaca, New York. Contributions to Herpetology 24: 1–465.Google Scholar
Sato, T., 2003. Terminonatator ponteixensis, a new elasmosaur (Reptilia: Sauropterygia) from the Upper Cretaceous of Saskatchewan. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 23: 89103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sato, T. & Wu, X.-C., 2006. Review of plesiosaurians (Reptilia: Sauropterygia) from the Upper Cretaceous Horseshoe Canyon Formation in Alberta, Canada. Paludicola 5: 150169.Google Scholar
Sato, T., Hasegawa, Y. & Manabe, M., 2006. A new elasmosaurid plesiosaur from the Upper Cretaceous of Fukushima, Japan. Palaeontology 49: 467484.Google Scholar
Schmidt, S., 1984. Paleoecology of nothosaurs. In: Reif, W.-E. & Wesphal, F. (eds): Third Symposium Mesozoic Terrestrial Ecosystems, Short Papers. Attempto Verlag (Tübingen): 215218.Google Scholar
Schreiweis, D.O., 1982. A comparative study of the appendicular musculature of penguins (Aves: Sphenisciformes). Smithson Contributions to Zoology 341: 145.Google Scholar
Storrs, G.W., 1986. Anatomy and relationships of Corosaurus alcovensis (Reptilia: Nothosauria) and the Triassic Alcova Limestone of Wyoming. PhD dissertation, Yale University: 367pp.Google Scholar
Storrs, G.W., 1997. Morphological and taxonomic clarification of the genus Plesiosaurus . In: Callaway, J.M., Nicholls, E. (eds): Ancient Marine Reptiles. Academic Press(San Diego): 145190.Google Scholar
Strganac, C., Jacobs, L.L., Polcyn, M.J., Mateus, O., Myers, T.S., Salminen, J., May, S.R., Araújo, R., Ferguson, K.M., Gonçalves, A.O., Morais, M.-L., Schulp, A.S. & da Silva Tavares, T., in press.Geological Setting and Paleoecology of the Upper Cretaceous Bench 19 Marine Vertebrate Bonebed at Bentiaba, Angola. Netherlands Journal of Geosciences.Google Scholar
Sues, H.-D., 1987. Postcranial skeleton of Pistosaurus and interrelationships of the Sauropterygia (Diapsida). Zoological Journal of the Linnaean Society 90: 109131.Google Scholar
Thewissen, J.G.M. & Taylor, M.A., 2007. Aquatic adaptations in amniotes. In: Hall, B.K. (ed.): Fins into Limbs, Evolution, Development, and Transformation. University of Chicago Press (Chicago): 310322.Google Scholar
Thurmond, J.T., 1968. A new polycotylid plesiosaur from the Lake Waco Formation (Cenomanian) of Texas. Journal of Paleontology 42: 12891296.Google Scholar
Vincent, P., Bardet, N., Suberbiola, X.P., Bouya, B., Amaghzaz, M. & Meslouh, S., 2011. Zarafasaura oceanis, a new elasmosaurid (Reptilia: Sauropterygia) from the Maastrichtian Phosphates of Morocco and the palaeobiogeography of latest Cretaceous plesiosaurs. Gondwana Research 19: 10621073.Google Scholar
Watson, D.S., 1924. The elasmosaur shoulder girdle and fore-limb. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 2: 885917.Google Scholar
Welles, S.P., 1943. Elasmosaurid plesiosaurs, with description of new material from California and Colorado. University of California Memoirs 13: 125–254.Google Scholar
Welles, S.P., 1962. A new species of elasmosaur from the Aptian of Colombia and a review of the Cretaceous plesiosaurs. University of California Publications Geological Sciences 44: 1–96.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1. A. Geographical location of the locality in Angola. B. Geological context and stratigraphic column with the position of Bench 19, the layer which produced the specimens described herein.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. MGUAN PA103 vertebral elements. A. Sequence of posterior cervical vertebrae and rib. B. Anterior cervical vertebra. C. Dorsal rib. D. Dorsal vertebra.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. MGUAN PA103 pectoral and limb elements. A. Pectoral girdle in ventral view. B. Forelimb elements as preserved. C. Left scapula in dorsal view. D. Left pelvic girdle in dorsal and ventral views. Bf, bone fragments; G, glenoid; H, humerus; Icl, interclavicle; Icv, intercoracoid vacuity; lc; left coracoid; Lcl, left clavicle; Pi, pisiform; Pp, postaxial process; R, radius; Ra, radiale; rc, right coracoid; Sdb, scapula dorsal blade; U, ulna; Icl, interclavicle; rs, right scapula; lcv, intercoracoid vacuity.

Figure 3

Fig. 4. Portion of recovered topology showing relationships of Cardiocorax mukulu. See text and Supplementary Material Figures 1 and 2 for detailed results.

Figure 4

Fig. 5. Results of phylogenetic morphometric analysis. A. Preferred tree. Landmark scores for each landmark using (B) heuristic and (C) RFTRA search methods. D. Comparison of the overall tree score between the heuristic and RFTRA method. See Supplementary Material Figures 4–13 for all recovered trees.

Figure 5

Fig. 6. Patterns of pectoral girdle evolution in Eosauropterygia. See text and Supplementary Material for discussion.

Figure 6

Fig. 7. Morphometric pectoral girdle variables against time. A. Ratio of the coracoid area versus the total length of the individual. Note the constrasting values between polycotylids and elasmosaurids, convergent with the ratios on pachypleurosaurids. B. Ratio of the coracoid area versus the ventral area of the scapula. Note the similar ratios for elasmosaurids and cryptocleidids. C. Ratio of the ventral area of the scapula versus the dorsal blade of the scapula area. Note the outlier position of Cardiocorax, only comparable with that of cryptocleidids. D. Humerus ratio, length versus distal width. Note the tendency in Eosauropterygia for increasing massiveness of the propodials, a trend convergent with various secondarily-adapted organisms; E. Radius ratio, length versus distal width. As for the propodials the epipodials also tend to increase in massiveness to increase the mechanical advantage of locomotor muscles and paddle stabilisers. See Supplementary Material Tables 1–3.

Supplementary material: PDF

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(PDF)
PDF 272.4 KB
Supplementary material: File

Avaujo supplementary material

Supplementary figures

Download Avaujo supplementary material(File)
File 4.9 MB
Supplementary material: PDF

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(PDF)
PDF 169.8 KB
Supplementary material: PDF

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(PDF)
PDF 1.2 MB
Supplementary material: PDF

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(PDF)
PDF 383.9 KB
Supplementary material: PDF

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(PDF)
PDF 355.9 KB
Supplementary material: PDF

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(PDF)
PDF 348 KB
Supplementary material: PDF

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(PDF)
PDF 393.6 KB
Supplementary material: PDF

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(PDF)
PDF 387.7 KB
Supplementary material: PDF

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(PDF)
PDF 392.1 KB
Supplementary material: PDF

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(PDF)
PDF 392.4 KB
Supplementary material: PDF

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(PDF)
PDF 375.8 KB
Supplementary material: PDF

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(PDF)
PDF 399.3 KB
Supplementary material: PDF

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(PDF)
PDF 403.2 KB
Supplementary material: File

Araújo supplementary material

Table S1

Download Araújo supplementary material(File)
File 130.6 KB
Supplementary material: File

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(File)
File 67.1 KB
Supplementary material: File

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(File)
File 59.4 KB
Supplementary material: File

Supplementary Material

Supplementary information supplied by authors.

Download Supplementary Material(File)
File 59.4 KB