Tuesday, 28 April 2015

Resurrecting the Unfortunate Dragon.


In the early 1860s a 5 m Plesiosaur was excavated from the Early Jurassic Blue Lias Formation at Street-on-the-Fosse in Somerset. This was subsequently described as Plesiosaurus megacephalus, and placed on public display at the Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery, where it remained until 24 November 1940, when along with many other artefacts stored in the museum, it was destroyed in an air raid during the Second World War, and apparently lost to science.

However prior to its destruction several plaster castes of the specimen were made, three of which survive today in the collections of the Natural History Museum in London, the Geology Museum at Trinity College Dublin and the British Geological Survey at Keyworth in Nottingham, and several other specimens from a variety of other Early Jurassic sights around England have been nominated as potential members of the species.

In a paper published in the journal Palaeontologica Electronica in April 2015, Adam Smith of the Nottingham Natural History Museum formally redescribes the species from the available material, designating a neotype specimen and evaluating which specimens that have been referred to the species should in fact be referred to it.

Historical photograph of the holotype skeleton of ‘Plesiosaurus’megacephalus. Photograph taken from glass plate negative in the Bristol City Museum & Art Gallery, originally published by Swinton (1948). Length of skeleton equals 4960 mm. Smith 2015.

In the 1860s little was known about Plesiosaurs, and the generic name ‘Plesiosaurus’ was applied to all specimens discovered. Since then it has become understood that these were a large and diverse group of creatures, and split into several families and numerous genera. The generic name ‘Plesiosaurus’ is now known to be quite inappropriate for the Street-on-the-Fosse specimen, as it was a member of the family Rhomaleosauridae. It has also been referred to as a member of the genera Rhomaleosaurus, Thaumatosaurus and Eurycleidus, though Smith does not feel that any of these designations are correct, instead creating a new generic name, Atychodracon, meaning ‘Unfortunate-Dragon’, in reference to the destruction of the original specimen.

In addition to the original Street-on-the-Fosse specimen, a second partial specimen from the same location has been referred to the species, as have two specimens from Barrow-upon-Soar in Leicestershire (one more-or-less complete and another partial and somewhat poorly preserved), and a complete specimen from Wilmcote in Warwickshire. Smith excludes the Warwickshire specimen from the species, believing it instead to represent a member of a new, undescribed species, but includes all the other specimens.

In zoological nomenclature a type specimen, or holotype, is designated when a new species is described, so that other specimens thought to belong to the same species can be compared to it. In the event that this type specimen is lost or destroyed the International Commission on ZoologicalNomenclature allows the designation of a new specimen as a neotype, so long as it is possible to confirm that it belongs to the same species as the original specimen. The plaster castes and photographs of the missing Bristol specimen of Atychodracon megacephalus provide a good reference point for establishing such a neotype, and Smith therefore designates the more complete of the Leicestershire specimens to be the neotype of the species.

See also…

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