HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''Stegouros'' (, meaning "roofed tail") is a genus of ankylosaurian dinosaur from the
Late Cretaceous The Late Cretaceous (100.5–66 Ma) is the younger of two epochs into which the Cretaceous Period is divided in the geologic time scale. Rock strata from this epoch form the Upper Cretaceous Series. The Cretaceous is named after ''creta'', ...
Dorotea Formation of southern
Chile Chile, officially the Republic of Chile, is a country in the western part of South America. It is the southernmost country in the world, and the closest to Antarctica, occupying a long and narrow strip of land between the Andes to the eas ...
. The genus contains a single species, ''Stegouros elengassen'', known from a semi-articulated, near-complete skeleton.


Discovery

In February 2018, the skeleton of a small ankylosaur was recovered by a team of Texan researchers near the Río de las Chinas valley of
Ultima Esperanza Ultima may refer to: Places * Ultima, Victoria, a town in Australia * Pangaea Ultima, a supercontinent to occur in the future * ''Ultima'', the larger lobe of the trans-Neptunian object 486958 Arrokoth, nicknamed ''Ultima Thule'' Companies and p ...
province in the Magallanes y la Antártica Chilena region of southern Chile. In 2021, the
type species In zoological nomenclature, a type species (''species typica'') is the species name with which the name of a genus or subgenus is considered to be permanently taxonomically associated, i.e., the species that contains the biological type specimen( ...
''Stegouros elengassen'' was named and described by Sergio Soto-Acuña ''et al''. The generic name combines the Greek ''stegos'', meaning "roof" and ''oura'', meaning "tail", referring to the roof-like covering of the tail end. The specific name ''elengassen'' is derived from an armoured creature in the mythology of the Aónik’enk, the indigenous inhabitants of the region where the holotype was discovered. The
holotype A holotype is a single physical example (or illustration) of an organism, known to have been used when the species (or lower-ranked taxon) was formally described. It is either the single such physical example (or illustration) or one of seve ...
, CPAP-3165, was found in a layer of the Dorotea Formation dating from the upper
Campanian The Campanian is the fifth of six ages of the Late Cretaceous Epoch on the geologic timescale of the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS). In chronostratigraphy, it is the fifth of six stages in the Upper Cretaceous Series. Campani ...
. It consists of a relatively complete skeleton with skull and lower jaws. The rear part, the hindlimbs, sacrum, pelvis and tail, was preserved articulated. The front parts were scattered over a small surface. It lacks the skull roof, the rear lower jaws, the shoulder blades, the right humerus and the pubic bones. Some
osteoderms Osteoderms are bony deposits forming scales, plates, or other structures based in the dermis. Osteoderms are found in many groups of extant and extinct reptiles and amphibians, including lizards, crocodilians, frogs, temnospondyls (extinct ...
were recovered. It represents an adult individual.


Description


Size and distinguishing traits

''Stegouros'' is a very small ankylosaur. It was estimated at to be about long. Only the tail was considered to be strictly distinctive. Unlike all other known Ankylosauria, the tail is short with no more than twenty-six caudal vertebrae, the last twelve of which are covered by seven pairs of large osteoderms, the last five of which again are fused together to form a flat connected structure. ''Stegouros'' differs from its close relative ''
Antarctopelta ''Antarctopelta'' ( ; meaning 'Antarctic shield') was a genus of ankylosaurian dinosaur with one known species, ''A. oliveroi'', which lived in Antarctica during the Late Cretaceous Period. It was a medium-sized ankylosaur, reaching 4 meter ...
'' in its smaller body size, relatively larger neural canal, longer dorsosacral vertebrae, higher and narrower vertebral bodies of the sacral vertebrae, absence of ossified tendons on the tail, teeth with six serrations on the anterior margin instead of seven or eight, and ''cingula'', thickened tooth crown bases, without vertical grooves. ''Stegouros'' differs from '' Kunbarrasaurus'' by having a curved instead of straight ulna and radius and a process from the maxilla running towards the lacrimal bone that is narrower and sloping backwards.


Cranium

The head is probably proportionally large, though it is difficult to precisely gauge the proportions due to limited preservation. The praemaxillae of the front snout are toothless, short, high and narrow, and completely fused at the midline. The front palate to which they contribute is high. The maxillary bones merge seamlessly into the plate-shaped lacrimal bones that slope backwards. The maxillary bones have internal branches that form a secondary palate. The row of teeth starts slightly in front of the lacrimal bone and continues below the eye socket. The entire top of the eye socket is formed by fused supraoccipitalia that form a continuous thickened canopy. Similar to ''Kunbarrasaurus'' the posterior parts of the skull are not fused so that the sutures remain visible. These parts are rough with pits so that raised bone pates or horn plates were probably present. In the lateral braincase, the basisphenoid is short, shorter than the basioccipital of the lower occiput. In the lower jaws, the central predentary, the bony core of the lower bill, is short and high with thin upper branches that are longer than the lower branches. The dentarium or ''os dentale'' is undulating in side view. The row of teeth is curved inwards, so that the rows of teeth of the lower jaws combined show an hourglass shape when viewed from above. The dentarium bears fourteen teeth, some of which the fossil preserves. The dentary teeth are leaf-shaped and high. The teeth are asymmetrical in external view. They have a convex ''cingulum'' that extends upwards into fluted ridges ending in serrations. The cingulum is asymmetrical: horizontal when seen from the outside but an arc seen viewed the inside, that is slightly oblique towards the front.


Postcrania

The cervical vertebrae are short. The
vertebral centra The spinal column, a defining synapomorphy shared by nearly all vertebrates,Hagfish are believed to have secondarily lost their spinal column is a moderately flexible series of vertebrae (singular vertebra), each constituting a characteristic ...
are wider than they are long, a typical ankylosaur feature, but they have hollow sides like Stegosauria. Towards the rear of the vertebral column, the transverse processes rise steeper, up to 60° on the posterior back. The vertebrae have high neural arches with both the pedicles and the neural spines reaching a considerable length. The anterior joint processes are U-shaped in top view. The sacrum has four true sacral vertebrae and an anterior sacral rod of two captured dorsosacrals that touch the ilium with short ribs but are not fused to it. At the rear, the sacrum lacks caudosacrals, a basal feature shared with ''Antarctopelta''. The humerus has a slender shaft, a basal feature. However, the ends are strongly transversely broadened, especially in the epiphyses, and there is a well-developed deltopectoral crest projecting anteriorly. On the outer posterior margin of the humerus, a conspicuous ridge runs downwards with a small bump at the upper end, in the same position in which Stegosauria have a tubercule for the attachment of the ''
musculus triceps brachii The triceps, or triceps brachii (Latin for "three-headed muscle of the arm"), is a large muscle on the back of the upper limb of many vertebrates. It consists of 3 parts: the medial, lateral, and long head. It is the muscle principally responsib ...
''. The radius is slender but the ulna is robust and broadened at the top with a well-developed
olecranon The olecranon (, ), is a large, thick, curved bony eminence of the ulna, a long bone in the forearm that projects behind the elbow. It forms the most pointed portion of the elbow and is opposite to the cubital fossa or elbow pit. The olecranon ...
, an upper projection to bend the elbow. An ulnare was presumably present in the wrist; this is indicated by the discovery in the left wrist of a small U-shaped element that is connected to the proximal surface of the fifth metacarpal bone. The hand claws are hoof-shaped, not pointed. The second finger is reduced to two phalanges as in the Stegosauria. The second finger ends in a flat disc-shaped phalanx that is blunt and probably no longer had a claw at all. More such phalanges have been found around both hands, suggesting the same was true for the third, fourth and fifth fingers. In the pelvis, the horizontal ilium has a very long and low anterior blade. It curves strongly forwards and to the sides, apparently to support a wide abdominal cavity. The rest of the ilium is very similar to that of the Stegosauria. The position and shape of the horizontal lateral ridge above the hip joint, i.e. semicircular, and the shape of the rear blade suggest that the latter turned inward during growth. The ischium is long and lacks a obturator projection on the anterior margin. The ischia are not fused together at their distal ends. The ischium tapers downwards with a slight bend forward halfway through. Nothing of the pubic bones has been found. The thighbones are only slightly longer than the shinbones. In this, ''Stegouros'' is closer to running ancestors who had a noticeably shorter femur. Later Ankylosauria typically have very short lower legs. The femur is straight and not bent as in running forms. The fourth trochanter, the protrusion on the posterior femoral shaft that served to attach the tail retractor muscle, is small and shaped like a vertical ridge. The lesser trochanter is fused with the greater trochanter. As with running forms, the feet are quite narrow. The third and fourth metatarsal bones have long contact surfaces at the top. This indicates that the midfoot was not spread out to support the weight, as is the case with most Ankylosauria and Stegosauria. The number of phalanges has not been reduced. At the third and fourth toes, however, the extreme phalanx is not in the shape of a claw but is a flat disc. Those claws present are shaped like hooves. The shoulder blades (scapulae) were not found. The coracoids are not fused with the shoulder blades. The sternal plates are unfused, and have long lateral tubular processes at the back that project caudolaterally.


Osteoderms

Osteoderms of the head were not found. It may be that those in ''Stegouros'' did not
ossify Ossification (also called osteogenesis or bone mineralization) in bone remodeling is the process of laying down new bone material by cells named osteoblasts. It is synonymous with bone tissue formation. There are two processes resulting in t ...
or that the individual of the holotype was not old enough to have completed ossification. At the second cervical vertebra, the axis, a flat bone plate with a length of nineteen millimeters was found. Apart from this, no large elements of the neck, such as cervical halfrings, were recovered. Eight medium-sized scutes have been found, oval and keeled with a length of four to five centimeters. Some other ankylosaurians are known to have such osteoderms to protect the flanks. These eight scutes were not in apparent association with any skeletal element except one that was directly adjacent to a neural arch of a vertebra. The small number of such scutes may indicate that the rump was not very heavily armored. Near the left hand was a cluster of four smaller osteoderms, fifteen to twenty millimeters in diameter, with more pointed keels. On the upper right ulna is a small round bone plate, keeled with a concave inner surface, next to a flat triangular osteoderm. Keeled osteoderms were found on the outside of the feet, three on the left foot and two on the right foot. Between the ilium and the neural spines of the sacrum is a continuous thin layer of ossified skin armor covered with vein grooves and pits. This indicates the presence of some kind of sacral shield as in Nodosauridae. However, it differs in that it is not made up of fused ossicles. Two pairs of small cone-shaped osteoderms with pointed keels and concave lower surfaces are present at the base of the tail. Very distinctive is the so-called "tail weapon". Ankylosaurids typically have a tail club but the ''Stegouros'' weapon has a very distinct build, representing a type not yet known from Ankylosauria. It has been compared by the describers to the maquahuitl, the Aztec mace. The weapon consists of seven pairs of flattened osteoderms that form an elongated structure that covers the tip of the tail. The first pair has sharp keels, the tips of which point towards the rear and sides. Their upper surfaces are, apart from that, more flattened while the lower sides are more conically curved. The inner sides, facing the tail vertebra, are strongly hollowed out. On their undersides are two pairs of smaller cone-shaped osteoderms fused, resembling those on the tail base, one pair pointing obliquely to the rear and the other obliquely sideways and downwards. The next pair is larger and covers two entire vertebrae. It is flatter and lacks the small osteoderms on the underside. The construction of the next five pairs is similar, but they have grown together with their leading and trailing edges to form one whole. They are still separately recognizable as pentagonal plates with pointed ends. At the very end, this structure also covers the undersides of the vertebrae. At the extreme tail tip is an eighth pair of small knob-shaped osteoderms. Numerous ossicles in the form of circular disks, four to five millimeters in diameter, were found around all skeletal elements. They are flattened into an oblate spheroid with an almost square profile. The outer sides are covered with numerous pits, indicating a thick stratum corneum. On the undersides there are perpendicular intersecting notches for the attachment of fibers that presumably connect the plates to the skin. Those notches are typical for Parankylosauria. Thus, a flexible armor was formed. Thirteen "free" vertebrae have been preserved in the tail base. Five additional vertebrae are enclosed in a structure made of osteoderms that has been compared to an
Aztec The Aztecs () were a Mesoamerican culture that flourished in central Mexico in the post-classic period from 1300 to 1521. The Aztec people included different ethnic groups of central Mexico, particularly those groups who spoke the Nahuatl ...
macuahuitl A macuahuitl () is a weapon, a wooden club with several embedded obsidian blades. The name is derived from the Nahuatl language and means "hand-wood". Its sides are embedded with prismatic blades traditionally made from obsidian. Obsidian ...
. After the eighteenth vertebra, all the vertebrae are missing: only the cavity within the macuahuitl gives an indication of how many were present. The authors estimate the maximum number of these to be eight, which would imply that there were only twenty-six tail vertebrae; the lowest number in all of Thyreophora was thirty-five until 2021, in ''Scelidosaurus''. The vertebrae of the tail are amphiplatyan to platycoel: flat on both ends or slightly concave at the rear. The lateral processes are long, twice longer than the neural spines, and are still present as far as the tail weapon. In the seventh through twelfth vertebrae, the neural spines are somewhat thickened at the top and shorter than the neural arches. Behind the twelfth vertebra, the undersides have a longitudinal groove and are as long as they are wide but very low. The inner cavity of the tail weapon is correspondingly flattened. At the fifteenth to eighteenth vertebrae, which are in the weapon, a CAT scan shows that the anterior joint processes, the prezygapophyses, are short while the posterior joint processes extend over the posterior vertebra, fused together on their inner sides to form a wedge-shaped structure in top view, filling a corresponding V-shaped space between the anterior joint processes of the posterior vertebra. This system must have stiffened the tail tip. However, no ossified tendons are used for this as with the Ankylosauridae, because they are completely lacking. Flattened vertebrae have also been found in ''Antarctopelta'', suggesting that a similar tail weapon was present in that species.


Classification

''Stegouros'' was found by Soto-Acuña ''et al.'' to belong to a distinct lineage of small ankylosaurs known from the Cretaceous of southern Gondwana, also including '' Kunbarrasaurus'' from Australia and ''
Antarctopelta ''Antarctopelta'' ( ; meaning 'Antarctic shield') was a genus of ankylosaurian dinosaur with one known species, ''A. oliveroi'', which lived in Antarctica during the Late Cretaceous Period. It was a medium-sized ankylosaur, reaching 4 meter ...
'' from the
Antarctic Peninsula The Antarctic Peninsula, known as O'Higgins Land in Chile and Tierra de San Martín in Argentina, and originally as Graham Land in the United Kingdom and the Palmer Peninsula in the United States, is the northernmost part of mainland Antarctic ...
. diverging before
Ankylosauridae Ankylosauridae () is a family of armored dinosaurs within Ankylosauria, and is the sister group to Nodosauridae. The oldest known Ankylosaurids date to around 122 million years ago and went extinct 66 million years ago during the Cretaceous–P ...
and
Nodosauridae Nodosauridae is a family of ankylosaurian dinosaurs, from the Late Jurassic to the Late Cretaceous period in what is now North America, South America, Europe, and Asia. Description Nodosaurids, like their close relatives the ankylosaurids, w ...
together, which was named Parankylosauria. The results of this phylogenetic analysis are shown below: The discovery of ''Stegouros'' has an important implication for the early history of ankylosaurians; it revealed that a novelly discovered, distinct lineage of ankylosaurs, the Parankylosauria, exist, diverging from Euankylosauria (the combined clade of
Ankylosauridae Ankylosauridae () is a family of armored dinosaurs within Ankylosauria, and is the sister group to Nodosauridae. The oldest known Ankylosaurids date to around 122 million years ago and went extinct 66 million years ago during the Cretaceous–P ...
and
Nodosauridae Nodosauridae is a family of ankylosaurian dinosaurs, from the Late Jurassic to the Late Cretaceous period in what is now North America, South America, Europe, and Asia. Description Nodosaurids, like their close relatives the ankylosaurids, w ...
) very early in the
Cretaceous The Cretaceous ( ) is a geological period that lasted from about 145 to 66 million years ago (Mya). It is the third and final period of the Mesozoic Era, as well as the longest. At around 79 million years, it is the longest geological period of ...
and surviving until the
Maastrichtian The Maastrichtian () is, in the ICS geologic timescale, the latest age (uppermost stage) of the Late Cretaceous Epoch or Upper Cretaceous Series, the Cretaceous Period or System, and of the Mesozoic Era or Erathem. It spanned the interv ...
, distinguished by a unique tail weapon, dubbed '
macuahuitl A macuahuitl () is a weapon, a wooden club with several embedded obsidian blades. The name is derived from the Nahuatl language and means "hand-wood". Its sides are embedded with prismatic blades traditionally made from obsidian. Obsidian ...
', evolved convergently to ankylosaurid tail clubs. It also suggests, through
phylogenetic bracketing Phylogenetic bracketing is a method of inference used in biological sciences. It is used to infer the likelihood of unknown traits in organisms based on their position in a phylogenetic tree. One of the main applications of phylogenetic bracketing ...
, that two genera found to be related by analyses by Soto-Acuña ''et al.'' (''
Antarctopelta ''Antarctopelta'' ( ; meaning 'Antarctic shield') was a genus of ankylosaurian dinosaur with one known species, ''A. oliveroi'', which lived in Antarctica during the Late Cretaceous Period. It was a medium-sized ankylosaur, reaching 4 meter ...
'' and '' Kunbarrasaurus'') possessed the same tail weapon.


Paleoenvironment

''Stegouros'' was discovered in layers of the Dorotea Formation. The Dorotea Formation dates to the late
Campanian The Campanian is the fifth of six ages of the Late Cretaceous Epoch on the geologic timescale of the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS). In chronostratigraphy, it is the fifth of six stages in the Upper Cretaceous Series. Campani ...
-
Maastrichtian The Maastrichtian () is, in the ICS geologic timescale, the latest age (uppermost stage) of the Late Cretaceous Epoch or Upper Cretaceous Series, the Cretaceous Period or System, and of the Mesozoic Era or Erathem. It spanned the interv ...
, between 71.7 ± 1.2 and 74.9 ± 2.1 million years ago. Fossils belonging to amphibians, mammals, fish, reptiles, and several invertebrates have also been discovered there, along with material belonging to indeterminate sauropod, theropod, and ornithischian dinosaurs.


References


External links


This Dinosaur Found in Chile Had a Battle Ax for a Tail
New York Times ''The New York Times'' (''the Times'', ''NYT'', or the Gray Lady) is a daily newspaper based in New York City with a worldwide readership reported in 2020 to comprise a declining 840,000 paid print subscribers, and a growing 6 million paid ...
, Dec. 1, 2021 {{Taxonbar, from=Q109539433 Ankylosaurs Ornithischian genera Late Cretaceous dinosaurs of South America Cretaceous Chile Fossils of Chile Fossil taxa described in 2021