Rebbachisauridae

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Rebbachisauridae
Conservation status
Extinct (fossil)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Superorder: Dinosauria
Suborder: Sauropodomorpha
Superfamily: Diplodocoidea
Family: Rebbachisauridae
Bonaparte, 1997
Genera

Rebbachisauridae is a so far still poorly known family of sauropod dinosaurs known from mostly fragmentary fossil remains from the Cretaceous of South America, Africa, and Europe.

[edit] History of classification

Sauropod specialist Jack McIntosh in 1990 included the first known genus, the giant North African sauropod Rebbachisaurus in the family Diplodocidae, subfamily Dicraeosaurinae, on the basis of skeletal details. With the discovery in subsequent years of a number of additional forms, it was realised that the Rebbachisaurs constitute a distinct group of dinosaurs, and in 1997 the Argentine paleontologist Jose Bonaparte named the family Rebbachisauridae.

[edit] Evolutionary relationships and characteristics

Although all authorities agree that the Rebbachisaurs are members of the Diplodocoidea clade, they lack the bifid (divided) cervical neural spines that characterise the Diplodocids and Dicraeosaurids, and for this reason are considered more primitive than the latter two groups. It is not yet known whether they share the distinctive whip-tail of the latter two taxa.

Rebbachisaurs are distinguished from other sauropods by their distinctive teeth, which have low angle, internal wear facets and asymmetrical enamel.

Unique among sauropods, at least some Rebbachisaurs (such as Nigersaurus) are characterised by the presence of tooth batteries, similar to those of hadrosaur and ceratopsian dinosaurs. Such a feeding adaptation has thus developed independently three times among the dinosaurs.

So far, Rebbachisaurs are known only from the middle and early part of the late Cretaceous. Unless the Nemegtosaurs turn out to be diplodocoids, then the Rebbachisaurs represent the last known representatives of this clade, and lived alongside the titanosaurs until fairly late in the Cretaceous. So far, no Rebbachisaurs are known from the very end of the Cretaceous period.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Bonaparte, J.F. 1997. Rayososaurus grioensis Bonaparte 1995. Ameghiniana 34(1):116.
  • McIntosh, J. S., 1990, "Sauropoda" in The Dinosauria, Edited by David B. Weishampel, Peter Dodson, and Halszka Osmólska. University of California Press, pp. 345-401.
  • Upchurch, P., Barrett, P.M. and Dodson, P. 2004. "Sauropoda". In The Dinosauria, 2nd edition. Weishampel, Dodson, and Osmólska (eds.). University of California Press, Berkeley. Pp. 259-322.
  • Wilson, J.A., (2002) Sauropod dinosaur phylogeny: critique and cladistic analysis, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 136(2):215-275
  • ------ (2005) "Overview of Sauropod Phylogeny and Evolution", in The Sauropods: Evolution and Paleobiology
  • Wilson, J. A. and Sereno, P.C. (2005) "Structure and Evolution of a Sauropod Tooth Battery" in The Sauropods: Evolution and Paleobiology in Curry Rogers and Wilson, eds, 2005, The Sauropods: Evolution and Paleobiology, University of California Press, Berkeley, ISBN 0-520-24623-3
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