- Russellosaurus
Taxobox
name = "Russellosaurus"
fossil_range =Late Cretaceous
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis =Sauropsid a
ordo =Squamata
familia =Mosasauridae
parafamilia = Russellosaurina
genus = "Russellosaurus"
genus_authority = Polcyn et Bell,2005
subdivision_ranks =Species
subdivision = "Russellosaurus coheni""Russellosaurus" (Polcyn et Bell, 2005) is a basal
mosasaur oid from the UpperCretaceous ofNorth America . Thegenus was described from askull discovered in an exposure of the Arcadia Park Shale (lower MiddleTuronian ) at Cedar Hill, Dallas County in south-centralTexas . The skull (SMU 73056, Shuler Musueum ofPaleontology ,Southern Methodist University ) was found in 1992 by a member of the Dallas Paleontological Society, who then donated to the museum. Other fragmentary specimens of "Russelosaurus" have been recovered from the slightly older Kamp Ranch Limestone at two other localities in theDallas area. Thetype species , "R. coheni", was named for the amateurfossil collector who discovered SMU 73056, and the genus name honourspaleontologist Dale A. Russell for his extensive work on mosasaurs ("Russell'slizard "). This is the secondspecies of mosasaur to have been named for Russell, the first being "Selmasaurus russelli" (Wright and Shannon, 1988). The type specimen of "Russellosaurus" is notable as being the oldest well-preserved mosasaur yet found in North America.Polcyn et. Bell (2005, p. 323) diagnose "Russellosaurus" as follows: "Small, lightly built mosasaur,
frontal narrow with a length to width ratio of 1.6:1. Sixteenmaxilla ry teeth and 16dentary teeth. Anteriorpremaxilla broad and blunt, in dorsal view the premaxillary-maxillary suture is oblique. The ectopterygoid is lightly built and composed of a distinct small subrectangularpterygoid process and a slender rod-likejugal process. Incipient emargination of the frontal by the externalnares . A pair offoramina separated by a thin medianseptum in the floor of the basioccipital are interpreted as the entrance of the basilar artery, and exit the ventral surface of the basioccipital as multiple small and anteriorly placed foramina. Extreme downgrowth of the pterygoid processes of the basisphenoid. Lightly built postorbitofrontal processes. The pineal foramen is located in the centre of the triangular parietal table. The supraoccipital loosecartilaginous contact with parietal. Median cleft in posterior parietal margin in dorsoventral aspect."Polcyn et Bell (2005, p. 322) designated "Russellosaurus" the type genus of a new parafamily of mosasaurs, the Rullessosaurina (= subfamily Russellosaurinae of Bell, 1997). This
clade of marine lizards is defined as all mosasaurs more closely related to the subfamiliesTylosaurinae andPlioplatecarpinae and theirsister group , consisting of thetaxa "Tethysaurus", "Yaguarasaurus", and "Russellosaurus", their common ancestor and all descendants than to thesubfamily Mosasaurinae . The skull of "Russelosaurus" shows many characters diagnostic of the Plioplatecarpinae while retaining manyplesiomorphic traits.Cladistic anaylsis indicates a close relationship between "Russellosaurus" and "Yaguarasaurus columianbus", a primitiveSouth America n mosasaur from the Turonian ofColombia . Together with "Tethysaurus nopscai", another early mosasauroid from the Turonian ofMorocco , these genera are believed to constitute a clade "basal to the divergence" of the subfamilies Plioplatecarpinae and Tylosaurinae.Based on the lack of fusion between elements of the basicarnium and a high degree of vascularization of the bone surface, which suggests the animal was undergoing a rapid growth stage when it died, the
holotype skull of "Russellosaurus coheni" is believed to have come from a subadult individual. An even more primitive mosasaur, "Dallasaurus turneri", was recovered from the same Cedar Hill locality as this specimen.References
*Bell, G. L. Jr., 1997. A phylogenetic revision of North American and Adriatic Mosasauroidea. pp. 293-332 In Callaway J. M. and E. L Nicholls, (eds.), "Ancient Marine Reptiles". Academic Press, 501 pp.
*Polcyn, M. J. and Bell, G. L., Jr. 2005. "Russellosaurus coheni" n. gen., n. sp., a 92 million-year-old mosasaur from Texas (USA), and the definition of the parafamily Russellosaurina. "Netherlands Journal of Geosciences" 84(3):321-333.
*Wright, K. R. and S. W. Shannon. 1988. "Selmasaurus russelli", a new plioplatecarpine mosasaur (Squamata, Mosasauridae) from Alabama. "Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology" 8(1):102-107.
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