Monday, December 14, 2015

The Giving of December. Ammosaurus

Ammosaurus has a long taxonomic relationship with Anchisaurus.‭ ‬The holotype fossils of Ammosaurus were originally described as a large species of Anchisaurus by Othniel Charles Marsh before they were erected as a distinct genus.‭ ‬Marsh then named a new species of Anchisaurus,‭ ‬A.‭ ‬solus,‭ ‬but then attributed that to Ammosaurus.‭ ‬Later palaeontologists found that the A.‭ ‬solus remains were just those of a juvenile of Ammosaurus major,‭ ‬and so A.‭ ‬solus became a synonym to the type species.‭
       Around the end of the twentieth and beginning of the twenty-first centuries,‭ ‬fresh debate surrounded Ammosaurus with many prominent palaeontologists considering Ammosaurus to actually be synonymous with Anchisaurus.‭ ‬Others however pointed out subtle difference in the pelvis between Anchisaurus and Ammosaurus and continue to treat the two as separate genera,‭ ‬even though some have said that the differences are at a species level not a genus one.‭ ‬As such the validity of Ammosaurus as a distinct genus can vary greatly depending upon who you ask,‭ ‬but a safe statement is that the fossils from Ammosaurus and Anchisaurus,‭ ‬if not from the same genus of dinosaur,‭ ‬represent two that are very similar to one another in everything but size.
       I terms of being a dinosaur,‭ ‬Ammosaurus was a prosauropod dinosaur,‭ ‬the form that was the precursor to the huge quadrupedal sauropods that would become commonplace towards the later stages of the Jurassic.‭ ‬Ammosaurus may have been quadrupedal,‭ ‬but their lighter frames mean that they would have better been able to rear up on their hind legs to reach high vegetation.‭ ‬Prosauropods like Ammosaurus were also recently descended from meat eating ancestors back in the Triassic,‭ ‬and it is possible but currently unknown for sure if Ammosaurus occasionally ate meat as well as plants.‭ ‬This is not to say that Ammosaurus was an active predator,‭ ‬it may have simply supplemented its herbivorous diet by scavenging meat off the carcasses of other animals.‭ ‬With some remains of Ammosaurus dating to the Bajocian stage,‭ ‬Ammosaurus is one of the few prosauropods known to have survived into the late Jurassic.
       The wide geographical and temporal range of Ammosaurus means that it would have‭ ‬come into contact with many other early/mid Jurassic dinosaurs and other creatures.‭ ‬These included crocodyliforms like Protosuchus to predatory theropod dinosaurs like Dilophosaurus which may have been predators of Ammosaurus early on in the Jurassic.

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