{"title":"超级莫里森地层中的长脚类动物。","authors":"D Cary Woodruff, Brian D Curtice, John R Foster","doi":"10.1111/joa.14108","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>The Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation sauropods Diplodocus (formerly \"Seismosaurus\") hallorum and Supersaurus vivianae are quantifiably the largest dinosaurian taxa from the formation, as well as being among the largest dinosaurs in the world. Their extreme body size (in particular body length, c. 50+ m) has fascinated the paleontological community since their discoveries and has sparked an ongoing discussion on the trends and limits of Morrison Formation sauropod body size. Although not an undeviating proxy, often the largest and skeletally most mature specimens are among the rarest (as exemplified in Triceratops). While their body size has no phylogenetic bearing, the extreme size and potential eco and biological significance of these two sauropod taxa are frequently discussed. Whether these rare and titanically proportioned sauropod specimens are large-bodied, senescent or both is an often-repeating rhetoric. To definitively make maturational inferences about these taxa, we osteohistologically sampled the holotype of D. hallorum (NMMNH P-25079) and the second known specimen of S. vivianae (WDC DMJ-021). Our age-determinant and maturational assessments indicate that both specimens were skeletally mature at their respective age of death. Retrocalculation methods for D. hallorum NMMNH P-25079 produce a maximum age-at-death estimation of 60 years, whereas S. vivianae WDC DMJ-021 lived well past skeletal maturity-so much so that reliable retrocalculated ages cannot be accurately determined at this time. Additionally, the rarity of such large sauropods within the Morrison Formation might be more parsimoniously explained as relating to their maturity as opposed to representing aberrant taxa on the Morrison landscape.</p>","PeriodicalId":14971,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Anatomy","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Seis-ing up the Super-Morrison formation sauropods.\",\"authors\":\"D Cary Woodruff, Brian D Curtice, John R Foster\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/joa.14108\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>The Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation sauropods Diplodocus (formerly \\\"Seismosaurus\\\") hallorum and Supersaurus vivianae are quantifiably the largest dinosaurian taxa from the formation, as well as being among the largest dinosaurs in the world. Their extreme body size (in particular body length, c. 50+ m) has fascinated the paleontological community since their discoveries and has sparked an ongoing discussion on the trends and limits of Morrison Formation sauropod body size. Although not an undeviating proxy, often the largest and skeletally most mature specimens are among the rarest (as exemplified in Triceratops). While their body size has no phylogenetic bearing, the extreme size and potential eco and biological significance of these two sauropod taxa are frequently discussed. Whether these rare and titanically proportioned sauropod specimens are large-bodied, senescent or both is an often-repeating rhetoric. To definitively make maturational inferences about these taxa, we osteohistologically sampled the holotype of D. hallorum (NMMNH P-25079) and the second known specimen of S. vivianae (WDC DMJ-021). Our age-determinant and maturational assessments indicate that both specimens were skeletally mature at their respective age of death. Retrocalculation methods for D. hallorum NMMNH P-25079 produce a maximum age-at-death estimation of 60 years, whereas S. vivianae WDC DMJ-021 lived well past skeletal maturity-so much so that reliable retrocalculated ages cannot be accurately determined at this time. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
侏罗纪上侏罗统莫里森地层中的长脚类恐龙Diplodocus(原名 "地震龙")hallorum和Supersaurus vivianae是该地层中可以量化的最大恐龙类群,也是世界上最大的恐龙之一。自它们被发现以来,其极端的体型(尤其是体长,约 50 多米)一直吸引着古生物学界,并引发了对莫里森地层蜥脚类恐龙体型趋势和极限的持续讨论。虽然它们的体型并不是一成不变的,但通常体型最大、骨骼最成熟的标本也是最稀有的(三角龙就是一个例子)。虽然它们的体型与系统发育无关,但这两个类人猿类群的极端体型及其潜在的生态和生物学意义经常被讨论。这些罕见的巨型类人猿标本究竟是大体型、衰老还是两者兼而有之,是一个经常重复的话题。为了对这些类群进行明确的成熟推断,我们对 D. hallorum(NMMNH P-25079)的主模式和 S. vivianae(WDC DMJ-021)的第二个已知标本进行了骨组织取样。我们的年龄测定和成熟度评估表明,这两个标本在各自的死亡年龄时骨骼均已成熟。D. hallorum NMMNH P-25079 的回溯计算方法得出的最大死亡年龄估计为 60 岁,而 S. vivianae WDC DMJ-021 的死亡年龄则远远超过了骨骼成熟期,以至于目前还无法准确确定可靠的回溯年龄。此外,在莫里森地层中罕见这种大型长脚类动物的原因可能与它们的成熟度有关,而不是代表莫里森地貌中的异常类群。
Seis-ing up the Super-Morrison formation sauropods.
The Upper Jurassic Morrison Formation sauropods Diplodocus (formerly "Seismosaurus") hallorum and Supersaurus vivianae are quantifiably the largest dinosaurian taxa from the formation, as well as being among the largest dinosaurs in the world. Their extreme body size (in particular body length, c. 50+ m) has fascinated the paleontological community since their discoveries and has sparked an ongoing discussion on the trends and limits of Morrison Formation sauropod body size. Although not an undeviating proxy, often the largest and skeletally most mature specimens are among the rarest (as exemplified in Triceratops). While their body size has no phylogenetic bearing, the extreme size and potential eco and biological significance of these two sauropod taxa are frequently discussed. Whether these rare and titanically proportioned sauropod specimens are large-bodied, senescent or both is an often-repeating rhetoric. To definitively make maturational inferences about these taxa, we osteohistologically sampled the holotype of D. hallorum (NMMNH P-25079) and the second known specimen of S. vivianae (WDC DMJ-021). Our age-determinant and maturational assessments indicate that both specimens were skeletally mature at their respective age of death. Retrocalculation methods for D. hallorum NMMNH P-25079 produce a maximum age-at-death estimation of 60 years, whereas S. vivianae WDC DMJ-021 lived well past skeletal maturity-so much so that reliable retrocalculated ages cannot be accurately determined at this time. Additionally, the rarity of such large sauropods within the Morrison Formation might be more parsimoniously explained as relating to their maturity as opposed to representing aberrant taxa on the Morrison landscape.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Anatomy is an international peer-reviewed journal sponsored by the Anatomical Society. The journal publishes original papers, invited review articles and book reviews. Its main focus is to understand anatomy through an analysis of structure, function, development and evolution. Priority will be given to studies of that clearly articulate their relevance to the anatomical community. Focal areas include: experimental studies, contributions based on molecular and cell biology and on the application of modern imaging techniques and papers with novel methods or synthetic perspective on an anatomical system.
Studies that are essentially descriptive anatomy are appropriate only if they communicate clearly a broader functional or evolutionary significance. You must clearly state the broader implications of your work in the abstract.
We particularly welcome submissions in the following areas:
Cell biology and tissue architecture
Comparative functional morphology
Developmental biology
Evolutionary developmental biology
Evolutionary morphology
Functional human anatomy
Integrative vertebrate paleontology
Methodological innovations in anatomical research
Musculoskeletal system
Neuroanatomy and neurodegeneration
Significant advances in anatomical education.