(Mammalia, Allotheria) from the Mesozoic of Gondwana

(Mammalia, Allotheria) from the Mesozoic of Gondwana

Mitt . Mus. Nat.kd. Berl ., Geowiss. Reihe 2 (1999) 159-170 19.10.1999 First Haramiyid (Mammalia, Allotheria) from the Mesozoic of Gondwana Wolf-Dieter Heinrich' With 5 figures Abstract A haramiyid tooth is described from the Upper Jurassic of Tendaguru in southwestern Tanzania, East Africa. The specimen, identified tentatively as a lower posterior premolar, is made the holotype of a new taxon, Staffia aenigmatica gen. et sp. nov. which is placed in the Haramiyida . Staffa gen. nov. shares several features with Thomasia from the Late Triassic to Early Jurassic of Europe, notably the arrangement of cusps in two parallel longitudinal rows bordering a central basin, cusp height which progressively decreases in both rows posteriorly, the different height of the rows, the U-shaped posterior rim, and the smooth enamel surface. The main difference between these taxa is the presence of well-developed synclines with rounded floors in Staffia gen. nov., especially that of the principal syncline LS 1. Resemblances in the basic tooth crown pattern indicate that occlusion and chewing might have been similar in both genera, but the synclines in Staffia gen . nov. suggest some subtle differences in food processing. Stafffa aenigmatica gen. et sp . nov. is the first record of a haramiyid from Gondwana, and also the youngest stratigraphic occurrence for this allotherian group so far. Key words: Mammalia, Allotheria, Haramiyida, Upper Jurassic, Tendaguru, Tanzania, East Africa . Zusammenfassung Ein unterer Backenzahn aus den oberjurassischen Tendaguru-Schichten von Tansania in Ostafrika wird als Stafffa aenigmatica gen. et sp . nov. beschrieben und zu den Haramiyida gestellt . Bei dem Fund handelt es sich wahrscheinlich um einen hinteren unteren Prämolaren . Staffia gen. nov. weist zahlreiche Merkmale auf, die bei der spät-triassischen bis früh-jurassischen Gat- tung Thomasia auftreten . Dazu zählen z. B. die Anordnung der Höcker in zwei unterschiedlich hohen Längsreihen, die in beiden Reihen von vorn nach hinten abnehmende Höckerhöhe, der U-förmige Hinterrand und die glatte Schmelzoberfläche. Die Synklinalen zwischen den Zahnhöckern von Stafjca gen. nov. stellen ein neuerworbenes Merkmal dar. Die weitgehenden Übereinstimmungen im Grundaufbau der Zahnkronen beider Gattungen lassen darauf schließen, daß die Kieferbewegung und der Kauvorgang ähnlich waren, doch deuten die Synclinalen bei Staffia gen. nov. auf eine differenziertere Aufbereitung der Nahrung hin . Staffia aenigmatica gen. et sp. nov. ist der erste Nachweis eines Haramiyiden auf dem Gondwana-Kontinent und zugleich der bisher erdgeschichtlich jüngste Beleg für diese Säugetiergruppe. Schlüssetw6rter: Mammalia, Allotheria, Haramiyida, Oberjura, Tendaguru, Tansania, Ostafrika . Introduction the Tendaguru Beds collected by the German Tendaguru expedition (1909-1913) . This pro- For nearly a century, a fragmentary eupantother- gram resulted in the discovery of the triconodont ian dentary, without teeth, from the Tendaguru Tendagurodon janenschi and the `eupantothere' Beds in Tanzania was the only known mamma- Tendagurutherium dietrichi (Heinrich 1998) . lian record from the Upper Jurassic of Africa. Microvertebrate sampling of matrix from the The imperfect dentary was briefly described and Tendaguru dinosaur Beds has continued for the illustrated by Branca (1916), and later fully de- last four years and has now yielded the first scribed and named as Brancatherulum tenda- haramiyid from the Mesozoic of Gondwana. gurense by Dietrich (1927). During the next 70 Haramiyids are primarily represented by iso- years no further mammal remains were obtained lated teeth from Upper Triassic to Lower Juras- either from the Tendaguru Beds in Tanzania or sic (Rhaetic, Rhaeto-Liassic ) deposits from Cen- from Upper Jurassic deposits elswhere in Africa. tral and Western Europe (e.g., Plieninger 1847, In 1995, the author started intensive microverte- Branca 1915, Simpson 1928a, Parrington 1947, brate sampling in dinosaur-bearing matrix from Peyer 1956, Hahn 1973, Clemens 1980, Hahn & 1 Museum für Naturkunde, Institut für Paläontologie, Invalidenstr. 43, D-10115 Berlin, Germany. Received January 1999, accepted May 1999 160 Heinrich, W.-D ., First Mesozoic Haramiyid of Gondwana Hahn 1983, Sigogneau-Russel 1989, Sigogneau- rowska 1992, Kielan-Jaworowska & Ensom 1992, Russell & Hahn 1994; Butler & McIntyre 1994). Simmons 1993, Butler & McIntyre 1994, McKen- Except for taxa of indeterminate affinities (e.g., na & Bell 1997) . It should also be noted that Hypsiprymnopsis rhaeticus Dawkins 1864, a pre- cladistic classifications_ (McKenna & Bell 1997) sumed tritylodont: Hahn & Hahn 1983) and sy- removed haramiyids and theroteinids from the nonyms (see Butler & McIntyre 1994), two gen- Mammalia sensu stricto to the nonmammalian era have been distinguished: Thomasia and Mammaliaformes. `Haramiyia' (e.g., Simpson 1928a, Parrington 1947, Hahn & Hahn 1983, Kermack et al. 1998). However, the recent discovery of Haramiyavia Geological and paleontological setting clemmenseni in the Upper Triassic of Greenland (Jenkins et al. 1997) confirmed suggestions by The Tendaguru Beds, known primarily for mass Sigogneau-Russell (1989) and Butler & McIntyre accumulations of dinosaur bones, are exposed in (1994) that these genera are based on lower southwestern Tanzania. Figure 1 shows the prin- (Thomasia) and upper teeth (Haramiyia) of a cipal subdivision of the Tendaguru Beds in the single haramiyid genus, for which the senior type area of Tendaguru Hill, following Hennig name is Thomasia (McKenna & Bell 1997, Ker- (1914) and Janensch (1914a, c). The succession mack et al. 1998). of sediments reaches 140 m thick, and includes Thomasia hahni (= Thomasia sp. 1, Hahn three limnic to brackish dinosaur-bearing depos- 1973: 7, fig. 2; Butler & McIntyre 1994: 450) its, the Lower, Middle, and Upper Saurian Beds, from the Upper Norian (Keuper) of Halberstadt and three marine sandstone units, the Nerinea in Central Germany and Haramiyavia clemmen- Bed, the Trigonia smeei Bed, and the Trigonia seni from the ? Norian-Rhaetic (Tait Bjerg schwarzi Bed (Fig. 1). The haramiyid mammal Beds, Osted Dal Member, Fleming Fjord For- described here comes from the Middle Saurian mation) of East Greenland (Jenkins et al. 1997) Bed. are the first haramiyids to appear in the fossil The highest marine unit of the Tendaguru record. Important collections are from the Beds, the Trigonia schwarzi Bed, has been equa- Rhaeto-Liassic of Saint-Nicolas-de-Port (Lor- ted with the lower Lower Cretaceous, and the raine) in France (Sigogneau-Russell 1989), Hol- remaining part of the sequence with the Upper well (Somerset) in England (e.g., Parrington Jurassic (e.g., Hennig 1914, Janensch 1914c, 1947, Butler & McIntyre 1994), Hallau in Swit- Dietrich 1933, Spath 1927-1933, Aitken 1956, zerland (Peyer 1956, Clemens 1980; Butler & 1961). The Middle and Upper Saurian Beds that McIntyre 1994), and Degerloch and Olgahain yielded the mammalian remains known so far (Baden-Wiirttemberg) in Germany (e.g., Plienin- from the Tendaguru Beds are considered to be ger 1847, Hahn 1973, Sigogneau & Hahn 1994) . Kimmeridgian to Tithonian in age (e.g., Aitken Moreover, a haramiyid molariform tooth has 1961, Russell et al. 1980, Schrank, 1999), but the been reported from the Lower Jurassic Kayenta precise age determination requires further bio- Formation in Arizona (Jenkins et al. 1983, stratigraphic investigations. Clemens 1988) . By contrast, the affinities of a Although the Tendaguru Beds cover large presumed haramiyid or multituberculate tooth areas in southwestern Tanzania (Hennig 1914, from the Middle Jurassic of England (Freeman Janensch 1914a, c) and many dinosaur localities 1976) remain obscure. were discovered in the surroundings of Tenda- Allotherian mammals, constituting a subclass guru Hill between 1909 and 1913 by the German of the Mammalia (e.g., Clemens & Kielan-Jawo- Tendaguru expedition (Janensch 1914a, 1925a, rowska 1979, Hahn & Hahn 1983, Sigogneau- 1929) and between 1924 and 1931 by the British Russell 1989, Kermack et al. 1998), include Tendaguru expedition (Parkinson 1930, Maier haramiyids, theroteinids, multituberculates and 1997), only two mammal-bearing sites have been eleutherodontids (e.g., Hahn et al. 1989, Ker- discovered so far (Fig. 1). Tendaguru Site IV, the mack et al. 1998) . Except for multituberculates, type locality of Brancatherulum tendagurense, most of these primitive mammals are still poorly lies in the Upper Saurian Bed and is located known due to the incompletenes of the fossil re- about 800 m south of Tendaguru Hill (Janensch cord and, therefore, the interrelationships and 1914a: 45), close to Tendaguru site B (Fraas classification of the allotherian mammals are still 1908, Janensch 1914a), the type locality of the the subject of much dispute (e.g., Hahn & Hahn sauropod Janenschia robusta (Fig. 1). Tendaguro- 1983, Hahn et al. 1989, Miao 1991, Kielan-Jawo- don janenschi, Tendagurutherium dietrichi, and Mitt . Mus. Nat.kd. Berl ., Geowiss. Reihe 2 (1999) 161 Geographic location and geological of Tendaguru, Tanzania structure Trigonia schwarzi Bed i~nzani~ Upper 0 --Saurian- Dares ------ Tendagur - / indi Bed Jg(WJ) " ' TS TS Trigonia smeei Bed -- _'Tendoguru E TS W TS Middle Saurian Bed " IV TS -yr TS Nerinea i to l ~di Bed 2 3 0 500 1000 1500 m TS TS Lower E wSB E W -TSMB o , Saurian -MSB '~ N B + + + + + + + -'LSB r r + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + Bed + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + _-G + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + Fig. 1. Map of

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    12 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us