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Jormungandr walhallaensis
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Title

Jormungandr walhallaensis : a new mosasaurine (Squamata: Mosasauroidea) from the Pierre Shale Formation (Pembina Member: Middle Campanian) of North Dakota

Title Variants

Alternative: A new mosasaurine from the Pierre Shale Formation of North Dakota

Related Titles

Series: Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, number 464

By

Zietlow, Amelia R., , author

Boyd, Clint A., , author
Van Vranken, Nathan E., , author

Type

Book

Material

Published material

Publication info

New York, NY, American Museum of Natural History, [2023]

Notes

"Issued October 30, 2023"

Supplemental material available online in a separate file.

Mosasaurs are large, carnivorous aquatic lizards with a global distribution that lived during the Late Cretaceous. After 200 years of scientific study, new mosasaur species are still being discovered as new localities are explored and specimens collected long ago are reevaluated using modern standards of species delimitation. Even so, the phylogenetic positions of many key taxa are unresolved and therefore our understanding of mosasaur macroevolution is muddled. Here, we describe a new genus and species of mosasaurine mosasaur comprising a partial skull and skeleton from the Pembina Member of the Pierre Shale Formation in Cavalier County, North Dakota. The lower bound on the age of the specimen is 80.04 ±0.11 Ma, provided by the underlying bentonite bed. Its skull and jaws are nearly complete, and the postcranial skeleton preserves seven cervical vertebrae with three hypapophyseal peduncles, 11 ribs, and five anterior dorsal vertebrae. The new specimen was scored into a modified version of an existing phylogenetic matrix of Mosasauroidea and was recovered in a polytomy with Clidastes; however, given that its morphology is significantly different from that of Clidastes, we refer it to a new genus and species, Jormungandr walhallaensis. Notably, this new taxon shares a mosaic of features seen in both basal (e.g., Clidastes; high dental counts) and derived (e.g., Mosasaurus; subrectangular quadrate) mosasaurines, in addition to possessing its own unique suite of autapomorphies. Given that it possesses morphology intermediate between Clidastes and Plotosaurini, we suspect that future analyses of mosasaur phylogeny, following the addition of new characters and taxa, will recover Jormungandr as transitional between them. Its occurrence increases the known diversity of mosasaurs from the Pembina Member and is the earliest mosasaur to possess autapomorphies of Plotosaurini. Finally, we also analyzed the matrix using different outgroups to test their effect on tree topology and resolution, and found that including multiple nonmosasauroid anguimorphs increased resolution, but not support, of mosasaurid ingroup relationships.

Subjects

Classification , Cretaceous , Jormungandr walhallaensis , Lizards, Fossil , Mosasauridae , North Dakota , Paleontology , Pierre Shale , Squamata

Call Number

QH1 .A4 no. 464 2023

Language

English

Identifiers

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1206/0003-0090.464.1.1
OCLC: 1406768662

 

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