Melanorosaurus

 Melanorosaurus (meaning "Black Mountain Lizard", from the Greek melas/μέλας, "black", oros/ὄρος, "mountain" + sauros/σαῦρος, "lizard") is a genus of basal sauropodomorphdinosaur that lived during the Late Triassicperiod. A herbivore from South Africa, it had a large body and sturdy limbs, suggesting it moved about on all fours. Its limb bones were massive and weighty, like sauropod limb bones.

Melanorosaurus
Temporal range: Late Triassic
~216.5–201 Ma 
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Melanorosaurus readi steveoc.jpg
Life restoration of M. readi
Scientific classificatione
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Clade:Dinosauria
Clade:Saurischia
Clade:Sauropodomorpha
Family:Melanorosauridae
Genus:Melanorosaurus
Haughton, 1924
Type species
Melanorosaurus readi
Haughton, 1924

DescriptionEdit

Size comparison

Melanorosaurus had a skull which measured approximately 250 mm. The snout was somewhat pointed, and the skull was somewhat triangular when seen from above or below. The premaxilla had four teeth on each side, a characteristic of primitive sauropodomorphs. The maxilla had 19 teeth on each side of the jaw.[1]

Melanorosaurus was around 8 metres (26 ft) long, with a weight of 1.3 metric tons (1.3 long tons).[2]

Discovery and speciesEdit

Left femur

The type specimenssyntypes SAM 3449 and SAM 3450, were described and named in 1924 by Haughton. They were collected from the Triassic Lower Elliot Formation, dating to the early Norian, on the north slope of the Thaba 'Nyama (Black Mountain) in Transkei, South Africa.[3] The first complete skull referred to Melanorosaurus, NM QR3314, was described in 2007.[1] However, this specimen comes from the Upper Elliot, unlike the Melanorosaurustype material and NM QR1551, rendering its referral to the genus untenable.[4]

Melanorosaurus thabanensis was named in 1993 by Gauffre, based on holotypeMNHN LES-16, a femur found in the Upper Triassic lower Elliot Formation.[5] However, a recent review of the material demonstrated that the femur, along with six other bones, can't be referred to the genus Melanorosaurus, and a new combination (Meroktenos thabanensis) was created.[6]

ClassificationEdit

Life restoration

Melanorosaurus was once classified as a prosauropod, but Prosauropoda no longer appears to be a natural group. According to some definitions of SauropodaMelanorosaurus is an early sauropod. However, these definitions also take in many other former "prosauropods", and Adam Yates has proposed a definition of Sauropoda that will specifically exclude Melanorosaurus(Sauropoda as all sauropodomorphs closer to Saltasaurus than Melanorosaurus). This definition would allow Sauropoda to retain its traditional concept.[7]


This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
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