Gannansaurus

Summary

Gannansaurus (meaning "Gannan lizard") is an extinct genus of somphospondylan sauropod dinosaur known from the latest Cretaceous Nanxiong Formation of Ganzhou Basin, Jiangxi Province of southern China. It is known from specimen GMNH F10001 which consists of a single, nearly complete dorsal vertebra and a mid-caudal vertebra. Gannansaurus was first named by Lü Junchang, Yi Laiping, Zhong Hui and Wei Xuefang in 2013 and the type species is Gannansaurus sinensis. Gannansaurus shares some characters with Euhelopus, indicating that it is more closely related to it rather than to other titanosauriforms.[1]

Gannansaurus
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous, 66.7–66 Ma
Skeletal restoration of Gannansaurus sinensis.
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Clade: Saurischia
Clade: Sauropodomorpha
Clade: Sauropoda
Clade: Macronaria
Genus: Gannansaurus
et al., 2013
Species:
G. sinensis
Binomial name
Gannansaurus sinensis
et al., 2013

History of discovery edit

The type specimen was collected from a construction site near Longling Town in Ganzhou, China. Most of the specimen was destroyed as a result of the construction work, but one dorsal vertebra was able to be pieced back together from fragments. A caudal vertebra was also saved. The two vertebrae are stored at the Ganzhou Museum of Natural History with the catalog number GMNH F10001. In 2013, Lü Junchang, Yi Laiping, Zhong Hui and Wei Xuefang described the remains as a new genus and species of sauropod, Gannansaurus sinensis. The genus name refers to the Gannan district of Ganzhou, where the specimens were found, and the species name refers to the specimens being found in China. The two vertebrae are assumed to represent the same individual based on their recovery from the same quarry.[1]

Classification edit

In their original description of Gannansaurus, Lü and colleagues suggested that it was closely related to Euhelopus, on the basis of a K-shaped arrangement of vertebral laminae uniquely shared by the two taxa.[1] Gannansaurus was included in a phylogenetic analysis by Mo and colleagues in 2023, and was recovered as a basal titanosauriform.[2]

Paleoecology edit

The ecosystem preserved in the Nanxiong Formation contained at least one other sauropod, Jiangxititan.[2] The top predator of the ecosystem was the tyrannosaurid Qianzhousaurus.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Junchang Lü; Laiping Yi; Hui Zhong; Xuefang Wei (2013). "A New Somphospondylan Sauropod (Dinosauria, Titanosauriformes) from the Late Cretaceous of Ganzhou, Jiangxi Province of Southern China". Acta Geologica Sinica (English Edition). 87 (3): 678–685. doi:10.1111/1755-6724.12079.
  2. ^ a b Mo, Jin-You; Fu, Qiong-Yao; Yu, Yi-Lun; Xu, Xing (2023-09-21). "A new titanosaurian sauropod from the Upper Cretaceous of Jiangxi Province, southern China". Historical Biology. doi:10.1080/08912963.2023.2259413. eISSN 1029-2381. ISSN 0891-2963.
  3. ^ Lü, Junchang; Yi, Laiping; Brusatte, Stephen L.; Yang, Ling; Li, Hua; Chen, Liu (2014). "A new clade of Asian Late Cretaceous long-snouted tyrannosaurids". Nature Communications. 5 (1): 3788. doi:10.1038/ncomms4788. ISSN 2041-1723.