“…Similarly, a pronounced concavity is present between the LSC and the PSC (best seen in dorsal view). Both concave gaps (the ASC and the PSC project further laterally than the lateral outline of the LSC reaches medially) are similarly present in many Titanosauriformes (with the exception of FAM 03.064; Knoll et al, 2019 ): Giraffatitan ( Janensch, 1935 ), Malawisaurus ( Andrzejewski et al, 2019 ), Sarmientosaurus ( Martínez et al, 2016 ), CCMGE 628/12457 ( Sues et al, 2015 ), Jainosaurus ( Andrzejewski et al, 2019 ), Ampelosaurus ( Knoll et al, 2013 ), Narambuenatitan ( Paulina-Carabajal et al, 2020 ), Bonatitan , Antarctosaurus , MCF-PVPH 765 and MGPIFD-GR 118 ( Paulina-Carabajal, 2012 ), but also in the rebbachisaurids Limaysaurus and Nigersaurus ( Paulina-Carabajal and Calvo, 2021 ). In contrast to other sauropods, the anterior portion of the LSC, as well as its lateral-most extent (best seen in dorsal view), seems somewhat posteriorly shifted in the macronarians Camarasaurus ( Witmer and Ridgely, 2008a ) and Europasaurus ( Figure 6B,F,J ; for further discussion, see Supplementary file 1 ).…”