Quetecsaurus

 Quetecsaurus (meaning "fire lizard", from the Milcayac word "quetec"[1]) is a genus of titanosaurian sauropod dinosaur known from the Late Cretaceous of the southern Mendoza Province, western Argentina. It contains a single species, Quetecsaurus rusconii.[1]

Quetecsaurus
Temporal range: Late CretaceousTuronian 
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Quetecsaurus rusconii Skeletal Me.jpg
Skeletal restoration, known material in blue
Scientific classificatione
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Clade:Dinosauria
Clade:Saurischia
Clade:Sauropodomorpha
Clade:Sauropoda
Clade:Macronaria
Clade:Titanosauria
Genus:Quetecsaurus
González Riga & Ortiz David, 2014
Type species
Quetecsaurus rusconii
González Riga & Ortiz David, 2014

DiscoveryEdit

Size comparison

Quetecsaurus was first described and named by Bernardo González Riga and Leonardo Ortiz David in 2014 and the type species is Quetecsaurus rusconii. It is known solely from the holotype, a partial skeleton found in close association that includes a postorbital, teeth, the atlas, a rear cervical vertebra, an incomplete dorsal vertebra, a rear caudalcentrum, dorsal ribs, a coracoid, five metacarpals and fragments of a humerusradius and ulna. The holotype was collected from red mudstones of the Cerro Lisandro FormationNeuquén Basin, dating to the middle or late Turonian stage of the Late Cretaceous. The specimen represents the first sauropod with well preserved materials from this formation.[1]

DescriptionEdit

Life restoration

Quetecsaurus was diagnosed based on three autapomorphies, i.e. unique traits, by its describers. The intercentrum of its atlas shows a prominent anteroventral border and enlarged posteroventral processes. Its humerus is uniquely shaped, with strongly sigmoid ("S" shaped) proximal border, rounded proximomedial border, and angular proximolateral corner. Like lognkosaurtitanosaurs, it possess lateral expansions on the neural spines of its rear cervical vertebra, however they are incipient and relatively reduced.

PhylogenyEdit

Quetecsaurus was assigned to the Titanosauria, and considered to be most closely related to Mendozasaurus and Futalognkosaurus, members of Lognkosauria, based on the presence of these lateral laminae on its neural spines. A preliminary phylogenetic analysis supported this assignment, placing Quetecsaurus as a sister taxon of the clade formed by Mendozasaurusand Futalognkosaurus.[1]


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 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
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