Browsing by Author "Choiniere, Jonah N."
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Item Convergent evolution of a eusuchian-type secondary palate within Shartegosuchidae. (American Museum novitates, no. 3901)(American Museum of Natural History., 2018-06-18) Dollman, Kathleen N.; Clark, James Matthew, 1956-; Norell, Mark.; Xu, Xing, 1969-; Choiniere, Jonah N.; Mongolian-American Museum Paleontological Project.; Mongolyn Shinzhlėkh Ukhaany Akademi.Shartegosuchids are a poorly known, early-branching group of Asian and North American crocodylomorphs. Shartegosuchids have been hypothesized to have eusuchian-type secondary palates, but a paucity of described material makes assessing this difficult. Our fieldwork in western Mongolia recovered cranial material of a new Shartegosuchus specimen from the Ulan Malgait Formation, which we CT-scanned and digitally reconstructed to investigate its palatal morphology. We then incorporated this new anatomical information into a revised phylogenetic dataset to assess its affinities. Our study confirms that Shartegosuchus has a posteriorly placed choana that is fully enclosed by the pterygoids, but differs from Eusuchia in possessing a secondary palatal fenestra and reduced palatine bones. Shartegosuchus, together with Adzhosuchus, Fruitachampsa, and Nominosuchus, forms the monophyletic group Shartegosuchidae. Shartegosuchidae is nested within a larger clade Shartegosuchoidea, and this clade is an earlier-diverging lineage than Eusuchia, showing that a eusuchian-type secondary palate evolved multiple times in crocodylomorphs, including very early in the group's evolutionary history. The co-occurrence of Nominosuchus in the Ulan Malgait Formation and the Shishigou Formation allows us to assign an early Oxfordian age to Shartegosuchus. The independent evolution of a eusuchian-type secondary palate in an oreinorostral group suggests that the link between platyrostry and a closed secondary palate has been overstated.Item Cranial osteology of Haplocheirus sollers Choiniere et al., 2010 (Theropoda, Alvarezsauroidea). (American Museum novitates, no. 3816)(American Museum of Natural History., 2014-10-22) Choiniere, Jonah N.; Clark, James Matthew, 1956-; Norell, Mark.; Xu, Xing, 1969-The basalmost alvarezsauroid Haplocheirus sollers is known from a single specimen collected in Upper Jurassic (Oxfordian) beds of the Shishugou Formation in northwestern China. Haplocheirus provides important data about the plesiomorphic morphology of the theropod group Alvarezsauroidea, whose derived members possess numerous skeletal autapomorphies. We present here a detailed description of the cranial anatomy of Haplocheirus. These data are important for understanding cranial evolution in Alvarezsauroidea because other basal members of the clade lack cranial material entirely and because derived parvicursorine alvarezsauroids have cranial features shared exclusively with members of Avialae that have been interpreted as synapomorphies in some analyses. We discuss the implications of this anatomy for cranial evolution within Alvarezsauroidea and at the base of Maniraptora.Item Supplemental Material for 'Convergent evolution of a eusuchian-type secondary palate within Shartegosuchidae. (American Museum novitates, no. 3901)'(2018-06-18) Dollman, Kathleen N.; Clark, James Matthew; Norell, Mark; Xu, Xing; Choiniere, Jonah N.; Mongolian-American Museum Paleontological Project.; Mongolyn Shinzhlėkh Ukhaany Akademi.Supplemental Material for 'Convergent evolution of a eusuchian-type secondary palate within Shartegosuchidae. (American Museum novitates, no. 3901)'