After more than 30 years, the oviraptorid "Ingenia" yanshini finally got a new name: officially, it is now Ajancingenia yanshini. This dinosaur, first described in 1981 by Rinchen Barsbold from a fragmentary skeleton, was
originally christened "Ingenia" but this generic name turns out to be
preoccupied by a nematode worm therefore necessitating a new denomination. The paper announcing the change of name was published in Zootaxa by one Jesse Easter and all sounded very well until I saw THIS! Shame on you, Mr Easter, this is not cool... not cool at all.
Ref:
R. Barsbold. 1981. Bezzubyye khishchnyye dinozavry Mongolii [Toothless carnivorous dinosaurs of Mongolia]. Sovmestnaia Sovetsko-Mongol’skaia Paleontologicheskaia Ekspeditsiia Trudy 15:28-39
J. Easter. 2013. A new name for the oviraptorid dinosaur "Ingenia" yanshini (Barsbold, 1981; preoccupied by Gerlach, 1957). Zootaxa. 3737(2), 184-190.
M. Mortimer. Theropod Database information on "Ingenia" published! ... by someone else
A. Cau. Il preoccupante caso del preoccupato Ingenia [AGGIORNAMENTO]
Original artworks on
Paleoexhibit are copyrighted to Nobu Tamura. Do not use without
permission (Email: nobu dot tamura at yahoo dot com). Check out my portfolio at spinops.blogspot.com.
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Ajancingenia yanshini
Sunday, November 3, 2013
Deinocheirus the magnificent
A tentative recon of Deinocheirus while awaiting the official publication describing two new skeletons |
Apparently, the mysterious Deinocheirus was more freaking awesome than you could ever have imagined... as recently revealed at SVP 2013! Here is the abstract:
New Specimens of Deinocheirus mirificus from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia
Lee, Yuong-Nam; Barsbold, Rinchen; Currie, Philip; Kobayashi, Yoshitsugu & Lee, Hang-Jae.
Abstract: The holotype of Deinocheirus mirificus was collected by the Polish-Mongolian Palaeontological Expedition at Altan Uul III in 1965. Because the holotype was known mainly on the basis of giant forelimbs with scapulocoracoids, Deinocheirus has remained one of the most mysterious dinosaurs. Two new specimens of Deinocheirus were discovered in the Nemegt Formation of Altan Uul IV in 2006 and Bugin Tsav in 2009 by members of the Korea-Mongolia International Dinosaur Expedition (KID). Except for the skull, middle dorsal and most of the distal caudal vertebrae, the right forelimb, left manus, and both pedes, the remaining parts of the skeleton (Mongolian Paleontological Center [MPC]-D 100/127) including a left forelimb clearly identifiable as Deinocheirus were collected. The humerus (993 mm in length) is longer than the 938 mm humerus of the holotype. The Altan Uul IV specimen (MPC-D 100/128) is a subadult Deinocheirus (approximately 72% of MPC-D 100/127), which consists of post-cervical vertebrae, ilia,ischia, and hind limbs. Both specimens provide important paleontological evidence for exact postcranial reconstruction of Deinocheirus mirificus. Cladistic analysis indicates that Deinocheirus is a basal member of Ornithomimosauria, but many new unique skeletal features appear to be quite different from other ornithomimosaurs. These include extreme pneumaticity of tall, anterodorsally oriented distal dorsal neural spines (7~8times taller than centrum height) with basal webbing, fused sacral neural spines forming a midline plate of bone that extends dorsally up to 170% of the height of the ilium, ventrally keeled sacral centra, a well-developed iliotibialis flange, a posterodorsally projecting posterior iliac blade with a concave dorsal margin, a steeply raised anteriordorsal margin of the ilium, an anteriorly inclined brevis shelf, vertically well-separatediliac blades above the sacrum, an completely enclosed pubic obturator foramen, triangular pubic boot in distal view, vertical ridges on anterior and posterior edges of medial surface of the femoral head, and a robust femur that is longer than tibiotarsus. These features suggest that Deinocheirus (unlike other ornithomimosaurs) was not a fast running animal, but a bulky animal with a heavily built pelvis and hind limbs. However,the dorsal ribs are tall and relatively straight, suggesting that the animal was narrow-bodied. A large number of gastroliths (>1100 ranging from 8 to 87 mm) were collected from the abdominal region of MPC-D 100/127, suggesting Deinocheirus was an herbivore.
Original artworks on
Paleoexhibit are copyrighted to Nobu Tamura. Do not use without
permission (Email: nobu dot tamura at yahoo dot com). Check out my portfolio at spinops.blogspot.com.
Labels:
Cretaceous,
Deinocheirus,
dinosaur,
OrnithomimosaurA,
Theropoda
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)