Coelophysis

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Contents

iCoelophysis
Fossil range: Late Triassic-Early Jurassic
Profile of Coelophysis bauri.
Profile of Coelophysis bauri.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Sauropsida
Superorder: Dinosauria
Order: Saurischia
Suborder: Theropoda
Superfamily: Coelophysoidea
Family: Coelophysidae
Genus: Coelophysis
Binomial name
Coelophysis bauri
Cope, 1889
Synonyms

Coelurus bauri Cope, 1887
Tanystropheus bauri (Cope, 1887)
?Podokeesaurus 1911
Rioarribasaurus colberti Hunt & Lucas, 1991
Syntarsus colberti (Hunt & Lucas, 1991) Paul, 1993

One of the earliest known dinosaurs, Coelophysis (see-law-FYS-iss) meaning "hollow form" in reference to its hollow bones (Greek κοιλος/koilos meaning 'hollow' and φυσις/physis meaning 'form') is a small, carnivorous biped from North America. It first appeared in the Late Triassic Period, around 210 million years ago.

[edit] Description

Coelophysis bauri is the earliest well known dinosaur. C. bauri was a lightly built dinosaur, between two to three meters in length, and less than a meter tall at the hips. The name Coelophysis means "hollow form" or "hollow process", so named because of its hollow limb bones.

Despite being an early dinosaur, the evolution of the theropod body form had already advanced greatly from creatures like Herrerasaurus and Eoraptor. Coelophysis had an elongated snout with large fenestrae which helped to reduce skull weight, while narrow struts of bones preserved the structural integrity of the skull. The neck had a pronounced sigmoid curve.

The torso of Coelophysis conforms to the basic theropod body shape, but the pectoral girdle displays some interesting special characteristics: C. bauri had a furcula (wishbone), the earliest known example in a dinosaur. Coelophysis also preserves the ancestral condition of possessing four digits on the hand (manus). It had only three functional digits, the fourth embedded in the flesh of the hand.

Coelophysis skeletal diagram
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Coelophysis skeletal diagram

The pelvis and hindlimbs of C. bauri are also slight variations on the theropod body plan. It has the open acetabulum and straight ankle hinge that define the Dinosauria. The hindlimb ended in a three-toed foot (pes), with a raised hallux.

The tail of Coelophysis had an unusual structure within its interlocking prezygapophysis of its vertebrae, which formed a semi-rigid lattice, apparently to stop the tail from moving up and down[1]. This may have let tail act as a rudder or counterweight when the animal was maneuvering at speed.

Coelophysis Animatronics model, Natural History Museum, London displaying supposed canibalistic behaviour.
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Coelophysis Animatronics model, Natural History Museum, London displaying supposed canibalistic behaviour.

[edit] Behavior

Evidence for behavior in the fossil record is always patchy and this also holds true for Coelophysis. Despite the huge number of specimens available from the Ghost Ranch fossil beds in New Mexico, only some basic deductions about its behavior can be gleaned.

Coelophysis was probably opportunistic, catching live prey and scavenging. The teeth were typical of predatory dinosaurs, blade-like and recurved with fine serrations on both anterior and posterior edges. They were rooted in the jaws in sockets, and were being continually replaced throughout the animal's life.

Since our knowledge of Coelophysis comes basically from the specimens excavated from Ghost Ranch, there is a tendency to see this massive congregation of animals as evidence for huge packs of Coelophysis roaming the land (as seen in Walking with Dinosaurs). There is no evidence for this. What the deposit does tell us is that large numbers of Coelophysis, along with other Triassic animals, were buried together. Some of the evidence from the taphonomy of the site indicates that these animals may have been gathered together to feed or drink from a depleted water hole or to feed on a big spawning run of fish, then becoming buried in a catastrophic flash flood. This reconstructed incident inspired the scenario of the first episode of Walking with Dinosaurs.

It has been suggested that C. bauri was a cannibal, however there is no longer any evidence to support the claim[2][3]. There may be other evidence coming to light that may show stomach contents from some of these specimens, which might bring greater resolution to the subject (Reinhart et al., 2005).

Two forms of Coelophysis have been found, a more gracile form and a slightly more robust form. Opinion among paleontologists is now that these were female and male variants (see: sexual dimorphism) [4] [5][6][7].

[edit] History of discovery

Edward Drinker Cope first named Coelophysis in 1889[8] during his competition to name species with Othniel Charles Marsh, known as the "Bone Wars". An amateur fossil collector, David Baldwin, had found the first remains of the dinosaur in 1881. The type species, C. bauri was named for Baur, one of the many fossil collectors who supplied Cope. However, these first finds were too poorly preserved to give a complete picture of this new dinosaur.

In 1947, a substantial 'graveyard' of Coelophysis fossils was found in New Mexico, at the Ghost Ranch, close to the original find. So many fossils together were probably the result of a flash flood, which swept away a large number of Coelophysis and buried them quickly and simultaneously. In fact, it seems such flooding was commonplace during this period of the Earth's history and, indeed, the Petrified Forest of nearby Arizona is caused by a preserved log jam of tree trunks that were caught in one such flood. Edwin H. Colbert made a comprehensive study[4] of all the fossils found up to that date, and it is from him that we take most of our information about Coelophysis. The Ghost Ranch specimens were so numerous, including many well-preserved specimens, that one of them has since become the diagnostic, or type specimen, for the entire genus, replacing the original, poorly preserved specimen (see Classification below).

Since the Ghost Ranch specimens were discovered, more skeletons have been found in Arizona, New Mexico and an as-yet unconfirmed specimen from Utah, including both adults and juveniles. The deposits where Coelophysis has been discovered date from the late Carnian to the early Norian faunal stages of the Triassic Period.

[edit] Classification

Coelophysis is a distinct taxonomic unit (genus), composed of a single species, C. bauri. Two additional species were originally described in addition to C. bauri, C. longicollis, and C. willistoni, however they are not diagnostic and are considered synonymous with C. bauri. C. rhodesiensis is probably part of this generic complex, and is known from the Jurassic of southern Africa (see below for more). In phylogenetic taxonomy, Coelophysis is treated as a clade within the Coelophysidae.

Coelophysis mount in the Natural History Museum, London.
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Coelophysis mount in the Natural History Museum, London.

In the early 1990s, there was debate over the diagnostic characteristics of the first specimens collected, compared to the material excavated at the Ghost Ranch Coelophysis quarry. Some paleontologists were of the opinion that the original specimens were not diagnostic beyond themselves and, therefore, that the name C. bauri could not be applied to any additional specimens. They therefore applied a different name, Rioarribasaurus[9], to the Ghost Ranch quarry specimens.

Since the numerous well-preserved Ghost Ranch specimes were used as Coelophysis in most of the scientific literature, the use of Rioarribasaurus would have been very inconvenient for researchers, so a petition was submitted to have the type specimen of Coelophysis transferred from the poorly-preserved original specimen to one of the well-preserved Ghost ranch specimens. In the end, the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) voted to make one of the Ghost Ranch samples the actual type specimen for Coelophysis and dispose of the name Rioarribasaurus altogether (declaring it a nomen rejectum, or "rejected name"), thus resolving the confusion. The name Coelophysis therefore became a nomen conservandum ("conserved name").

Sullivan & Lucas (1999) suggested that the original type specimen was referable to what they thought was a newly discovered coelophysid, Eucoelophysis baldwini.[10] However, subsequent studies have shown that Eucoelophysis was misidentified, and is actually a primitive, non-dinosaurian ornithodiran closely related to Silesaurus. Therefore, the original type specimen of Coelophysis cannot be considered a specimen of Eucoelophysis. [11]

In addition to all of this, there is a competing controversy with another coelophysoid, Megapnosaurus, which many regard to be congeneric with Coelophysis [12][6]. To make matters more confusing, Paul[13] suggested that Coelophysis should be placed in Megapnosaurus (then known as Syntarsus) to get around the above-mentioned taxonomic confusion.

In a situation affecting many dinosaur genera, many specimens were originally classified as new species but were in fact species of Coelophysis. For example, Prof. Mignon Talbot's 1911 discovery[14] which she labeled Podokesaurus holyokensis, may be related to (or is) Coelophysis. In addition, C. posthumus, named by Friedrich von Huene in 1908, also needs reclassification and is tentatively titled Halticosaurus longotarsus at the moment.

[edit] Trivia

Coelophysis was the second dinosaur in space. Although Maiasaura had been taken into space three years earlier, a Coelophysis skull from the Carnegie Museum of Natural History was aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour mission STS-89 when it left the atmosphere on January 22, 1998. It was also taken onto the space station Mir before being returned to Earth.

Coelophysis is also the state fossil of New Mexico.

[edit] In popular culture

Coelophysis are featured in Walking With Dinosaurs as resourceful little dinosaurs. When Dinosaurs Roamed America features this creature similarily, but meeker, able to hunt only insects.

The 1970's TV show Land of the Lost also featured Coelophysis, nicknamed "Spot" by the main characters.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Gay, Robert J. 2001. "An unusual adaptation in the caudal vertebrae of Coelophysis bauri (Dinosauria: Theropoda)." PaleoBios 21: supplement to number 2. Page 55.
  2. ^ Gay, Robert J. 2002. "The myth of cannibalism in Coelophysis bauri." Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 22(3); 57A
  3. ^ [1]Livescience.com, 2006
  4. ^ a b Colbert, Edwin. (1989) "The Triassic Dinosaur Coelophysis". Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin.
  5. ^ Colbert, Edwin. 1990. in Dinosaur Systematics.
  6. ^ a b Paul GS. (1988) Predatory Dinosaurs of the World
  7. ^ Gay, R. 2005. Sexual Dimorphism in the Early Jurassic Theropod Dinosaur Dilophosaurus and a Comparison with Other Related Forms; pp. 277-283 in K. Carpenter (ed.), The Carnivorous Dinosaurs. Indiana University Press, Bloomington, IN.
  8. ^ Cope ED.(1889) "On a new genus of Triassic Dinosauria". American Naturalist xxiii p. 626
  9. ^ Hunt and Lucas, (1991). "Rioarribasaurus, a new name for a Late Triassic dinosaur from New Mexico (USA). Paläontol. Z. 65 p. 191-198.
  10. ^ Sullivan and Lucas (1999). "Eucoelophysis baldwini, a new theropod dinosaur from the Upper Triassic of New Mexico, and the status of the original types of Coelophysis". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 19(1): 81-90
  11. ^ R. B. Irmis, S. J. Nesbitt, and W. G. Parker. (2005). "A critical review of the Triassic North American dinosaur record." In A. W. A. Kellner, D. D. R. Henriques, & T. Rodrigues (eds.), II Congresso Latino-Americano de Paleontologia de Vertebrados, Boletim de Resumos. Museum Nacional/UFRJ, Rio de Janeiro 139.
  12. ^ Downs, Alex. 2000. in "Dinosaurs of New Mexico," New Mexico Museum of Natural History Bulletin.
  13. ^ Paul GS. (1993) in New Mexico Museum of Natural History Bulletin.
  14. ^ Talbot M (1911). "Podokesaurus holyokensis, a new dinosaur from the Triassic of the Connecticut Valley." Amer. Jour. Sci. 4 469-479

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