Cryptoclidus

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Cryptoclidus (Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell) is a genus of plesiosaur reptile from the Middle Jurassic period of England, France, and Cuba.[1]

Discovery

File:Cryptoclidus AMNH.jpg
Skeleton AMNH 995

Cryptoclidus was a plesiosaur whose specimens include adult and juvenile skeletons, and remains which have been found in various degrees of preservation in England, Northern France, Russia, and South America. Its name, meaning "hidden clavicles", refer to its small, practically invisible clavicles buried in its front limb girdle.

The type species was initially described as Plesiosaurus eurymerus. The specific name "wide femur" refers to the forelimb, which was mistaken for a hindlimb at the time. It was moved to its own genus Cryptoclidus by Seeley (1892).[2]

Fossils of Cryptoclidus have been found in the Oxford Clay of Cambridgeshire, England. The dubious species Cryptoclidus beaugrandi is known from Kimmeridgian-age deposits in Boulogne-sur-Mer, France.[3] Cryptoclidus vignalensis, which is now considered undiagnostic,[4] hails from the Jagua Formation of western Cuba.[5]

In 2016, there was a report about a fragmentary Cryptoclidus postcranial skeleton from the Callovian deposits of Nikitino village in Spassky District, Ryazan Oblast, Russia,[6] but later Zverkov et al. defined it as an intedermitate cryptoclidid.[7]

Description

File:Cryptoclidus NT small.jpg
Life reconstruction of C. eurymerus

Cryptoclidus was a medium-sized plesiosaur, with the largest individuals measuring up to Template:Cvt long and weighing about Template:Cvt.[8][9] The fragile build of the head and teeth preclude any grappling with prey, and suggest a diet of small, soft-bodied animals such as squid and shoaling fish. Cryptoclidus may have used its long, intermeshing teeth to strain small prey from the water, or perhaps sift through sediment for buried animals.[10]

The size and shape of the nares and nasal openings have led Brown and Cruickshank (1994) to argue that they were used to sample seawater for smells and chemical traces.[11]

Classification

File:Cryptoclidus1DB.jpg
Life restoration of C. oxoniensis, currently considered a dubious species synonymous with C. eurymerus[8]
File:Cryptoclidus eurymerus Tubingen.JPG
Cast of a fossil skeleton, University of Tübingen, with the fore and hindlimbs swapped[12]

The cladogram below follows the topology from Benson et al. (2012) analysis.[13]

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Z. Gasparini and L. Spaletti. 1993. First Callovian plesiosaurs from the Neuquen Basin, Argentina. Ameghiniana 30(3):245-254

External links

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  1. Brown, David S., and Arthur RI Cruickshank. Template:Usurped Palaeontology 37.4 (1994): 941.
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  3. Bologne-sur-Mer at Fossilworks.org
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  5. De la Torre, R., and A. A. Cuervo. (1939). Dos nuevas especies de ichthyosaurios del Jurisico de Vinales. Universidad de La Habana, Depto. Geol. y Paleont. pp. 1-9.
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  11. Brown and Cruickshank, 1994
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