Latirhinus

Extinct genus of reptiles From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Latirhinus

Latirhinus (meaning "broad nose" from the Latin latus (broad) and Greek ῥίς, rhis (nose)) is an extinct genus of lambeosaurine[1] hadrosaurid dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous of Mexico. The type species, Latirhinus uitstlani, was named in 2012 on the basis of a partial skeleton from the Campanian-age Cerro del Pueblo Formation. The specific name uitstlani means "southern" in the Náhuatl language of Mexico, a reference to the species' southern occurrence in the Cretaceous landmass Laramidia.

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Latirhinus
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous, 72.5 Ma
Reconstructed skeleton, Universum (UNAM)
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Clade: Ornithischia
Clade: Ornithopoda
Family: Hadrosauridae
Subfamily: Lambeosaurinae
Genus: Latirhinus
Prieto-Márquez and Serrano-Brañas, 2012
Type species
Latirhinus uitstlani
Prieto-Márquez and Serrano-Brañas, 2012
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Discovery and research

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Perspective

During the 1980s, a team from UNAM's Geological Institute, including Shelton P. Applegate, René Hernández-Rivera, Espinosa-Arrubarrena, the SEPC team, and some volunteers, excavated the remains of a dinosaur near the town of Presa de San Antonio, belonging to the Cerro del Pueblo Formation in the Parras Basin, located in Coahuila, Mexico. The specimen was found by Don Ramón López, which was a juvenile specimen of 6 meters long, 2.2 height at the waist, and an estimated weight of 3 tons, of which 65% was recovered.[2] This was the first dinosaur skeleton from Mexico to be mounted for public display.[3] This specimen, though fairly complete, lacked a skull, but was identified as the saurolophine Kritosaurus sp. based on comparisons with Kritosaurus incurvimanus, which is now considered a more recent synonym of Gryposaurus notabilis.[4] Due to its importance, the skeleton was given the informal name of "Isauria", and it is exhibited in the Museum of the Institute of Geology of the UNAM, Universum, Museo Papalote in the State of Hidalgo, Museo del Desierto, and several private parks. Serrano-Brañas, in 2006, identified one of the bones collected as a supposed nasal, and together with the appendicular skeleton, he referred to the genus Gryposaurus in his thesis.[5][6]

Description

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Life restoration

The holotype specimen, IGM 6583, consists of a partial skeleton including a partial right nasal, 10 dorsal and 14 caudal vertebrae, the right coracoid, left scapula, both humeri and ulna, right III and IV metacarpals, periacetabular process of Right ilium, iliac peduncle of the right ischium, both femurs, tibiae, and fibulae, left talus, right and left metatarsals III and IV, and several proximal phalanges of the right foot.[7]

Latirhinus was probably a gregarious hadrosaurid, about 6.8 m in length, with a low back and a very broad nose. However, some authors suggest that it was actually a lambeosaurine, instead of a saurolophine as it was initially described, thus making the phylogenetic position of this animal in relation to other hadrosaurids still uncertain.[8][9]

Classification

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Pectoral elements

Latirhinus was originally thought to be similar to the saurolophine Gryposaurus. However, a 2012 study found its holotype, as originally defined, to be a chimera comprising both lambeosaurine and saurolophine remains; the holotype bones would've belonged to a lambeosaurine.[7] While this position has been accepted by other researchers,[10][11] there are still disagreements over where Latirhinus falls within Lambeosaurinae. The first cladogram shows Latirhinus as a basal lambeosaurine,[10] while the second shows an alternate position as a derived member of Lambeosaurini.[11]

Lambeosaurinae

See also

References

Further reading

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