Aublysodon

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Nephrozoa

Aublysodon
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous, 83–65.5 Ma
Illustrations of the teeth by Leidy and O. C. Marsh, 4: A. mirandus 5: A. amplus 6: A. cristatus
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
clade: Dinosauria
clade: Theropoda
Superfamily: Tyrannosauroidea
Family: Tyrannosauridae
Subfamily: Aublysodontinae
Nopcsa, 1928
Genus: Aublysodon
Leidy, 1868
Type species
Aublysodon mirandus
Leidy, 1868
Species

A. mirandus Leidy, 1868
A. lateralis? Cope, 1876
A. grandis? (Marsh, 1890 [originally Ornithomimus])
A. amplus? Marsh, 1892
A. cristatus? Marsh, 1892

Aublysodon (uncertain derivation; perhaps "backwards-flowing tooth"?) is a name given to a large number of carnivorous dinosaur teeth of a certain form found in numerous late Cretaceous period geological formations.

The genus was named by Joseph Leidy in 1868, though it is now considered dubious, because the type specimen consists only of an isolated premaxillary tooth, found in the Judith River Group of Montana. Although this specimen is now lost, similar teeth have been found in many United States states, western Canada, and Asia.[1] These teeth almost certainly belong to juvenile tyrannosaurine tyrannosaurids, but most have not been identified to species level. However, it is likely that the type tooth (and therefore the name Aublysodon mirandus itself) belongs to one of the species in the genus Daspletosaurus, which was present in contemporary formations, and which matches specific details of the original tooth.[2] The synapomorphies alleged to distinguish the Aublysodontinae, especially lack of serrations on premaxillary teeth could have been caused by tooth wear in life, postmortem abrasion, or digestion.[3] Most other "Aublysodontine"-type teeth may be from ontogenetic stages or sexual morphs of other tyrannosaurids.[3]

Apart from the type species Aublysodon mirandus over the years several other species have been named. These are now all considered either dubious or identical to other species or as having no close connection to A. mirandus.

Contents

History

Aublysodon mirandus

In the mid-to-late 19th century many dinosaur taxa were named for isolated teeth; such genera include Trachodon, Palaeoscincus, and Troodon. Even before the badlands of North America started revealing the bones of Tyrannosaurus, teeth turning up in many localities in the Western United States revealed the presence of large predatory dinosaurs.

In 1856 Joseph Leidy had named fourteen teeth collected by Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden in 1854 and 1855 from the Judith River Badlands of Montana[1] as the species Deinodon horridus.[4] In 1866 Edward Drinker Cope chose three nonserrated teeth from the original syntype series of fourteen as the lectotypes of Deinodon horridus.[5] Leidy named these same three teeth Aublysodon mirandus in 1868. The meaning of the generic name is uncertain because Leidy himself gave no etymology or explanation of the intended meaning. The genus name is derived from Greek αὖ, au, "again", "backwards", "contrariwise", βλύζω, blyzo, "to spout", "to flow" and ὀδών, odon, "tooth". The specific name means "wonderful" or "strange" in Latin.

Lithography of the original syntypes of Deinodon: the small tooth shown in figures 41-45 is ANSP 9535, the later lectotype of Aublysodon mirandus. Figures 37-40 show ANSP 9533, and figures 33 and 34 specimen ANSP 9534, the later lectotypes of Deinodon horridus

Because the name Aublysodon mirandus was based on the same type, it was at first a junior objective synonym of Deinodon horridus, which latter name thus had priority. Cope in 1868 mistakenly thought the name Deinodon was preoccupied by the snake Dinodon and renamed Deinodon horridus into a Aublysodon horridus.[6] If Deinodon really had been preoccupied, this would have made Aublysodon a valid genus. In 1899 Oliver Perry Hay pointed out Cope's mistake; Aublysodon horridus is a junior objective synonym of Deinodon horridus, just as Aublysodon mirandus had been.[7] However, in 1892 Aublysodon became an independent genus when Othniel Charles Marsh further limited its type by choosing a single small nonserrated premaxillary tooth with a D-shaped cross-section, specimen ANSP 9535, as the lectotype of Aublysodon mirandus.[8] The two other teeth, ANSP 9533 and ANSP 9534, remained as the lectotypes of Deinodon horridus. The names were thus separated.[9]

The tooth-based taxon Aublysodon was a mystery for a long time since no further skeletal elements were found that could be assigned with certainty to the teeth. In the early twentieth century it was assumed by some workers that it represented a member of the Ornithomimidae when it was not yet known this group was toothless. Lawrence Morris Lambe in 1902 referred the tooth to Struthiomimus;[10] Hay in 1930 renamed A. mirandus into a Ornithomimus mirandus,[11] forgetting in that case Aublysodon would have priority.

Today it is known that similar teeth are found in juvenile specimens of Daspletosaurus, and it is likely that teeth referred to Aublysodon came from that genus.[2] In October 2000, the type specimen of Aublysodon went missing when being sent by registered mail from the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia to the Field Museum of Natural History and coupled with the presence of Aublysodon-type teeth in other juvenile tyrannosaurines than Daspletosaurus, such as those of Tyrannosaurus, remains of which can also be found in Montana, the name was by Thomas Carr no longer considered to represent a real biological taxon but to be a nomen dubium.[12]

Other species

Apart from Aublysodon mirandus and A. horridus several other species have been named within the genus. In 1876 Cope created an Aublysodon lateralis, based on specimen AMNH 3956,[13][14] a tooth of a juvenile tyrannosaurine or of Dromaeosaurus. In 1892 Marsh named two more species: Aublysodon amplus and Aublysodon cristatus, based on teeth YPM 296 and YPM 297 respectively.[8] They may represent teeth from juvenile individuals of T. rex as they were found in the Maastrichtian Lance Formation.[12] In 1903 John Bell Hatcher renamed Laelaps explanatus Cope 1876 into a Aublysodon explanatus.[15] This probably represents a tooth of Saurornitholestes. In 1932 Friedrich von Huene made Ornithomimus grandis Marsh 1890, probably an early Campanian tyrannosauroid, an Aublysodon grandis.[16] In 1967 Alan Jack Charig named three species: Aublysodon lancinator, Aublysodon novojilovi and Aublysodon lancensis; these had originally been species of Gorgosaurus.[17] The first two are today seen as juvenile specimens of Tarbosaurus; the last represents either a juvenile individual of Tyrannosaurus or a separate genus Nanotyrannus.

The first skeletal material referred to an original Aublysodon species was a partial skull unearthed in Jordan, Montana[1] in 1966 and described by Ralph Molnar in 1977/1978.[18] The skull, specimen LACM 28741 at forty-five centimetres the length of an average human arm, bore pointed teeth attached to a long narrow snout. First thought to be a juvenile Tyrannosaurus, then interpreted as a large dromaeosaurid, this "Jordan theropod" was given the name Aublysodon molnaris by Gregory S. Paul in 1988;[19] in 1990 the name was by Paul emended to Aublysodon molnari, applying the correct genitive.[20] It was made a separate genus Stygivenator by George Olshevsky in 1995,[21] but was later, in 2004, reinterpreted to be a juvenile Tyrannosaurus rex by Thomas Carr and Tom Williamson.[12] Another partial skeleton from New Mexico was considered to represent Aublysodon, but later research by Thomas Carr and Tom Williamson has shown that it is probably referable to Daspletosaurus.[12] In 1988 Paul also created another species when renaming Shanshanosaurus huoyanshanensis Dong 1977 into Aublysodon huoyanshanensis.[19] It probably represents a Tarbosaurus specimen.

Classification

Aublysodon was by Cope assigned to the Goniopoda in 1870,[22] a group roughly equivalent to the modern Theropoda. Marsh however, in 1892 was misled by the small size of the teeth, their D-shaped cross-section and their lack of serrations into considering Aublysodon a mammal exceptionally large for the Cretaceous.[8] By the early twentieth century it was again generally understood that Aublysodon was a theropod reptile; later it would be typically assigned to the Deinodontidae, a group today called the Tyrannosauridae.

Aublysodon was by Paul in 1988 thought to belong to a unique subfamily of tyrannosaurids called the Aublysodontinae,[19] a name already coined, together with an Aublysodontidae, by Franz Nopcsa in 1928.[23] This was a concept which afterwards enjoyed some popularity: Thomas Holtz proposed a stem clade definition of the Aublysodontinae in 2001, "Aublysodon and all taxa sharing a more recent common ancestor with it than with Tyrannosaurus".[24]

Aublysodon was for a time also used in definitions of higher-level taxa. Holtz proposed a node clade definition of the Tyrannosauridae in 2001 as "all descendants of the most recent common ancestor of Tyrannosaurus and Aublysodon", using Aublysodon as an anchor taxon.[24] Paul Sereno has also used Aublysodon as an anchor taxon for the Tyrannosauridae, although his definition was problematic for other reasons.[3] These concepts have now been redefined without the dubious name.

Because Aublysodon is today considered a nomen dubium based on material probably belonging to Daspletosaurus, its affiliations are likely tyrannosaurid and the terms Aublysodontinae and Aublysodontidae have become irrelevant.

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c "Aublysodon." Dodson, et al. Page 128.
  2. ^ a b Currie, P. (2005). "Theropods, including birds." Pp. 367-397 in Currie and Koppelhus (eds)., Dinosaur Provincial Park: A Spectacular Ancient Ecosystem Revealed. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
  3. ^ a b c "Results," in Holtz (2001). Pg. 67.
  4. ^ Leidy, J., 1856, "Notices of the remains of extinct reptiles and fishes, discovered by Dr. F.V. Hayden in the badlands of the Judith River, Nebraska Territory", Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences 8(2): 72
  5. ^ Cope, E.D., 1866, "Discovery of a gigantic dinosaur in the Cretaceous of New Jersey", Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 18: 275-279
  6. ^ Cope, E.D., 1868, "On some Cretaceous Reptilia", Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 20: 233-242
  7. ^ Hay, O.P., 1899, "On the nomenclature of certain American fossil vertebrates", American Geologist 24: 345-349
  8. ^ a b c Marsh, O.C., 1892, "Notes on Mesozoic vertebrate fossils", American Journal of Science, 44: 170-176
  9. ^ Carpenter, K., 1982, "Baby dinosaurs from the Late Cretaceous Lance and Hell Creek formations and a description of a new species of theropod", Contributions to Geology, University of Wyoming, 20(2): 123-134
  10. ^ *Lambe, L.M., 1902, "New genera and species from the Belly River Series (mid-Cretaceous)", Geological Survey of Canada Contributions to Canadian Palaeontology 3(2): 25-81
  11. ^ Hay, O.P., 1930, Second Bibliography and Catalogue of the Fossil Vertebrata of North America. Carnegie Institution of Washington. 390(II), pp 1-1074
  12. ^ a b c d Carr and Williamson (2004).
  13. ^ Cope, E.D., 1876, "Descriptions of some vertebrate remains from the Fort Union Beds of Montana", Paleontological Bulletin, 22: 1-14
  14. ^ Cope, E.D., 1876, "Descriptions of some vertebrate remains from the Fort Union Beds of Montana", Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 28: 248-261
  15. ^ Hatcher, J.B., 1903, "Osteology of Haplocanthosaurus, with description of a new species, and remarks on the probable habits of the Sauropoda and the age and origin of the Atlantosaurus Beds", Memoirs of the Carnegie Museum, 2(1): 1-72
  16. ^ Huene, F. von, 1932, Die fossile Reptil-Ordnung Saurischia, ihre Entwicklung und Geschichte. Monographien zur Geologie und Palaeontologie. 4(1-2), pp 1-361
  17. ^ Charig, A.J., 1967, "Archosauria", pp 708-718 in: Walter Brian Harland (ed.) The Fossil Record: A Symposium with Documentation, jointly sponsored by the Geological Society of London and the Palaeontological Association, Geological Society of London, pp 827
  18. ^ Molnar, R.E., 1978, "A new theropod dinosaur from the Upper Cretaceous of central Montana", Journal of Paleontology 52(1): 73-82
  19. ^ a b c Paul, G.S., 1988, Predatory Dinosaurs of the World. Simon & Schuster, New York, pp 464
  20. ^ Paul, G.S., 1990, "The many Myths, some old, some new, of Dinosaurology", Modern Geology 16: 69-99
  21. ^ Olshevsky, G.; Ford, T.L. & Yamamoto, S., 1995, "The origin and evolution of the tyrannosaurids", Kyoryugaku Saizensen 9/10: 92-119/75-99
  22. ^ Cope, E.D., 1870, "Synopsis of the extinct Batrachia, Reptilia and Aves of North America", Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, New Series 14(1): 1-252
  23. ^ Nopcsa, F., 1928, "The genera of reptiles", Palaeobiologica 1: 163-188
  24. ^ a b "Results," in Holtz (2001). Pg. 66.

References

  • Carr, T.D.; and Williamson, T.E. (2004). "Diversity of late Maastrichtian Tyrannosauridae (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from western North America". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 142 (4): 479–523. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.2004.00130.x. 
  • Dodson, Peter & Britt, Brooks & Carpenter, Kenneth & Forster, Catherine A. & Gillette, David D. & Norell, Mark A. & Olshevsky, George & Parrish, J. Michael & Weishampel, David B. The Age of Dinosaurs. Publications International, LTD. p. 128. ISBN 0-7853-0443-6.
  • Holtz, TR, Jr. (2001), "The phylogeny and taxonomy of the Tyrannosauridae" in: K Carpenter & D Tanke [eds.], Mesozoic Vertebrate Life. Indiana Univ. Press, pp. 64–83.
  • Jacobsen, A.R. 2001. "Tooth-marked small theropod bone: An extremely rare trace". p. 58-63 In: Mesozioc Vertebrate Life. Ed.s Tanke, D. H., Carpenter, K., Skrepnick, M. W. Indiana University Press.

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