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Extinct genus of reptiles From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eretmosaurus (meaning "oar lizard") is an extinct genus of plesiosaur from the Early and Middle Jurassic of England and Russia.[1][2] Two species are known: E. rugosus and E. dubius.
Eretmosaurus Temporal range: Early - Middle Jurassic, | |
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Neotype specimen of E. rugosus | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Reptilia |
Superorder: | †Sauropterygia |
Order: | †Plesiosauria |
Family: | †Microcleididae |
Genus: | †Eretmosaurus Seeley, 1874 |
Type species | |
†Eretmosaurus rugosus Seeley, 1874 | |
Other species | |
Synonyms | |
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The holotype of E. rugosus consists of vertebrae, girdles, and limb bones and was discovered along Aust Cliff, where the Westbury Formation outcrops. Specimen BRSMB Cb 2458 was also assigned to the species by Owen (1840).[3] This specimen later became the syntype and it consisted of several vertebrae that had been discovered at different locations in the Blue Lias in Gloucestershire.
Owen (1840) was the first to describe the specimens, which were named as Plesiosaurus rugosus.[3] Later, Owen (1865) described a headless skeleton discovered in the Ammonites stellaris zone of the Blue Lias at Granby, Nottinghamshire (NHMUK 14435) that he assigned to P. rugosus,[4] and Seeley used NHMUK 14435 as the basis for naming Eretmosaurus rugosus in 1874.[5]
As BRSMB Cb 2458 was not diagnostic and was lost by 1940, a petition was filed with the ICZN over the holotype by Brown and Bardet (1994),[1] and NHMUK 14435 was allocated as the official neotype in 1996.[6]
A fragmentary specimen of Eretmosaurus rugosus has also been identified from the Middle Jurassic of Siberia by Menner (1992).[2]
A partial skull and skeleton belonging to a plesiosaur was discovered in the Harpoceras faleifer zone, Whitby, England and it was initially described by Blake & Tate (1876) as a species of Plesiosaurus known as P. dubius. It was later reclassified as a species of Eretmosaurus by Blake in Blake & Tate (1876).[7]
Benton and Spencer (1995) mentioned a third species of Eretmosaurus: E. macropterus; they rectified this mistake within the same paper by mentioning on page 116 that E. macropterus actually belongs to Microcleidus.[8]
Eretmosaurus was classified into Rhomaleosauridae by Persson (1963),[9] then into Pliosauridae by Brown (1981),[10] then into Elasmosauridae by Bardet (1995)[11] and Bardet et al. (1999),[12] and most recently into Microcleididae by Benson et al. (2012).[13]
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