Diplosaurus is an extinct genus of goniopholidid mesoeucrocodylian. Fossils have been found from the Western United States and range from Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous in age. The genus was first named and described in a paper written in 1877 by Othniel Charles Marsh.[1]

Diplosaurus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Archosauria
Clade: Pseudosuchia
Clade: Crocodylomorpha
Clade: Crocodyliformes
Family: Goniopholididae
Genus: Diplosaurus
Marsh, 1877
Species

Discovery and etymology

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The generic name, derived from Greek διπλόος, diploos, "double", probably refers to the "biconcave vertebrae" Marsh mentions as a distinctive trait compared to modern forms. The type species is Diplosaurus felix.[2][3][1] The species was named on a heavily eroded skull roof and several postcranial elements, including a partial humerus, though the fossils have yet to be properly diagnosed.[3] The fossils had been collected the same year by Benjamin Franklin Mudge and others during a Yale expedition to Morrison, Colorado,[3] one of the first dinosaur-bearing battle grounds of Othniel Marsh’s competition with Edward Drinker Cope.[3] In 1890 Karl Alfred von Zittel recombined this with Goniopholis into a Goniopholis felix, but today this is generally rejected.[2][3]

Along with D. felix (sometimes misspelled D. felise), a second species of Diplosaurus was constructed in 1877 by Marsh after he recombined Hyposaurus vebbii, named by Edward Drinker Cope in 1874, with Diplosaurus into a new combination, Diplosaurus vebbii.[4] Cope had named the species on a vertebra collected by Kansas railway worker and politician William C. Webb in 1871,[5][6] though the fossil has since been lost.[6] The fossil was even reported on in the newspaper Harpers Monthly and described as an 2.4 to 3.0 m (8 to 10 ft) long crocodilian.[6] D. nanus was named by Marsh in 1895 based on a right humerus but is now considered to be a nomen dubium.[3] The humerus had been collected by Marsh earlier in 1870 in the older Sundance Formation deposits in the Green River Basin of Utah.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b Marsh, O. C. (1877). Notice of some new vertebrate fossils. American Journal of Arts and Sciences 14:249-256
  2. ^ a b Williston, S. W. (1906). American amphicoelian crocodiles. The Journal of Geology, 14(1), 1-17.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Norell, M. A., & Storrs, G. W. (1989). Postilla Number 203[dead link].
  4. ^ Williston, S. W. (1905). The Hallopus, Baptanodon, and Atlantosaurus beds of Marsh. The Journal of Geology, 13(4), 338-350.
  5. ^ Cope, E. D. (1875). The Vertebrata of Cretaceous formations of the West. Report of the United States Geological Survey of the territories.
  6. ^ a b c Everhart, M. J. (2016). William E. Webb–Civil War correspondent, railroad land baron, town founder, Kansas legislator, adventurer, fossil collector, author. Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science, 179-192.