Uronautes is a dubious genus of extinct plesiosaur from the family Rhomaleosauridae. Uronautes is known from several fossilized vertebra, portions of a few limbs, and ribs.[1]
Uronautes Temporal range: Late Cretaceous
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Genus: | ?Uronautes
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Etymology
The word Uronautes comes from a fusion of the two Greek words Ουρα, meaning "tailed," and Ναυτεσ, meaning "sailor", or "mariner".[2] The species name of U. cetiformis comes from the Greek word for whale (or any large sea monster), κῆτος and the Latin word forma, which means "shaped", of "formed" meaning "shape".[3]
Taxonomy
Uronautes was first described by the American paleontologist, Edward Drinker Cope in 1876[4]. Because of the small number of supposed Uronautes fossils, Samuel Paul Welles described the genus as a "nomen dubium", doubting that the remains were evidence of a true genus in 1956.[5] The genus Uronautes is still considered a nomen dubium which means "dubious name". In zoological nomenclature, a nomen dubium is a scientific name that is of unknown or doubtful application.
Description
Like many other rhomaleosaurids, such as Rhomaleosaurus, Uronautes was a short-necked plesiosaur. The Cervical vertebrae are short, with partially attached processes and double-headed ribs.[6]
Distribution
Supposed Urounautes fossils are known from only a few locations: the Cretaceous deposits of the Fox Hills, and in similar deposits near Fort Pierre, and the Judith River, all in Montana.[8][9].
References
- ^ Geological record 1880, pg.280
- ^ The Plesiosaur Site - Genus
- ^ Latin Word Lookup
- ^ E. D. Cope. 1876. On some extinct reptiles and Batrachia from the Judith River and Fox Hills Beds of Montana. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 28:340-359
- ^ :: Professor Paul's Guide to Reptiles : Sauropterygia;plesiosaurs & their relatives : Extinct reptiles,family Rhomaleosauridae;Rhomaleosaurs : Uronautes
- ^ Fieldiana: Geology, April, 1903, North American Plesiosaurs, Williston. Pg. 11
- ^ Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, Vol. 28, 1876 (1876), pp. 340-359
- ^ Fieldiana: Geology, April, 1903, North American Plesiosaurs, Williston. Pg. 11
- ^ E. D. Cope. 1876. On some extinct reptiles and Batrachia from the Judith River and Fox Hills Beds of Montana. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 28:340-359