BackgroundMarine deposits from the Callovian of Europe have yielded numerous species of metriorhynchid crocodylomorphs. While common in English and French Formations, metriorhynchids are poorly known from the Iberian Peninsula. Twenty years ago an incomplete, but beautifully preserved, skull was discovered from the Middle Callovian of Spain. It is currently the oldest and best preserved metriorhynchid specimen from the Iberian Peninsula. Until now it has never been properly described and its taxonomic affinities remained obscure.Methodology/Principal FindingsHere we present a comprehensive description for this specimen and in doing so we refer it to a new genus and species: Maledictosuchus riclaensis. This species is diagnosed by numerous autapomorphies, including: heterodont dentition; tightly interlocking occlusion; lachrymal anterior process excludes the jugal from the preorbital fenestra; orbits longer than supratemporal fenestrae; palatine has two non-midline and one midline anterior processes. Our phylogenetic analysis finds Maledictosuchus riclaensis to be the basal-most known member of Rhacheosaurini (the subclade of increasingly mesopelagic piscivores that includes Cricosaurus and Rhacheosaurus).Conclusions/SignificanceOur description of Maledictosuchus riclaensis shows that the craniodental morphologies that underpinned the success of Rhacheosaurini in the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous, as a result of increasing marine specialization to adaptations for feeding on fast small-bodied prey (i.e. divided and retracted external nares; reorientation of the lateral processes of the frontal; elongate, tubular rostrum; procumbent and non-carinated dentition; high overall tooth count; and dorsolaterally inclined paroccipital processes), first appeared during the Middle Jurassic. Rhacheosaurins were curiously rare in the Middle Jurassic, as only one specimen of Maledictosuchus riclaensis is known (with no representatives discovered from the well-sampled Oxford Clay Formation of England). As such, the feeding/marine adaptations of Rhacheosaurini did not confer an immediate selective advantage upon the group, and it took until the Late Jurassic for this subclade to dominate in Western Europe.
Resumen: El presente artículo es una indagación en el universo de ficción que en torno al paleolítico se ha transmitido a través de los dibujos animados. Se integran los dibujos animados de prehistoria dentro de las investigaciones presentes sobre cine histórico o prehistórico y se lleva a cabo una clasificación previa de los mismos. Por último, se analizan las películas de dibujos (la saga Ice Age y Los Croods) más relevantes para el periodo paleolítico. Todo ello nos permite reflexionar acerca del papel de la prehistoria en el mundo de las imágenes cinematográficas y concluir que la relación entre ciencia y cine es más compleja de lo que parece. En conclusión se puede decir que el cine ha inventado su propia Edad de Piedra poblada de dinosaurios y Hombres de las cavernas no sin tener en cuenta a veces las investigaciones científicas.
Maledictosuchus riclaensis is a metriorhynchid crocodylomorph from the Callovian (Middle Jurassic) of Ricla (Spain). It is the most basal member of the Rhacheosaurini Tribe; it has recently been described and defined by its cranial elements (an almost complete skull and part of the lower jaw), but there were no data on the postcranial elements. Associated with the skull three vertebrae were collected. These vertebrae were preserved in black calcite nodules, and they have recently been prepared. The postcranial elements of the metriorhynchids are poorly documented, and usually badly preserved or included in the matrix. Herein we describe the three vertebrae (part of the holotype) of M. riclaensis. These comprise one cervical, one dorsal and one caudal vertebra, which, like the skull, are well preserved and lack postmortem distortion or deformation.Keywords: Metriorhynchidae, crocodylomorph, Callovian, vertebrae, Teruel, Iberian Peninsula ResumenMaledictosuchus riclaensis es un crocodilomorfo metriorrínquido del Calloviense (Jurásico medio) de Ricla (España). Es el miembro más basal de la tribu de los raqueosaurinos, y ha sido definido a partir de sus elementos craneales (un cráneo prácticamente completo y parte de la mandíbula inferior). Sin embargo no había datos de los elementos poscraneales. Durante la campaña de prospección en la que se recuperó el holotipo, se recuperaron tres vértebras asociadas al cráneo. Las vértebras estaban preservadas en nódulos de calcita, y han sido preparadas recientemente. Los elementos poscraneales de los metriorrínquidos están poco documentados, y normalmente, mal preservados o incluidos en la matriz. En este trabajo se hace descripción de tres vértebras, cervical, dorsal y caudal, del ejemplar tipo de M. riclaensis.
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