Cargando…

A walk in the maze: variation in Late Jurassic tridactyl dinosaur tracks from the Swiss Jura Mountains (NW Switzerland)

BACKGROUND: Minute to medium-sized (footprint length (FL) less than 30 cm) tridactyl dinosaur tracks are the most abundant in the Late Jurassic tracksites of Highway A16 (Reuchenette Formation, Kimmeridgian) in the Jura Mountains (NW Switzerland). During excavations, two morphotypes, one gracile and...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Castanera, Diego, Belvedere, Matteo, Marty, Daniel, Paratte, Géraldine, Lapaire-Cattin, Marielle, Lovis, Christel, Meyer, Christian A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5885975/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29629243
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.4579
_version_ 1783312065374453760
author Castanera, Diego
Belvedere, Matteo
Marty, Daniel
Paratte, Géraldine
Lapaire-Cattin, Marielle
Lovis, Christel
Meyer, Christian A.
author_facet Castanera, Diego
Belvedere, Matteo
Marty, Daniel
Paratte, Géraldine
Lapaire-Cattin, Marielle
Lovis, Christel
Meyer, Christian A.
author_sort Castanera, Diego
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Minute to medium-sized (footprint length (FL) less than 30 cm) tridactyl dinosaur tracks are the most abundant in the Late Jurassic tracksites of Highway A16 (Reuchenette Formation, Kimmeridgian) in the Jura Mountains (NW Switzerland). During excavations, two morphotypes, one gracile and one robust, were identified in the field. Furthermore, two large-sized theropod ichnospecies (Megalosauripus transjuranicus and Jurabrontes curtedulensis) and an ornithopod-like morphotype (Morphotype II) have recently been described at these sites. METHODS: The quality of morphological preservation (preservation grade), the depth of the footprint, the shape variation, and the footprint proportions (FL/footprint width (FW) ratio and mesaxony) along the trackways have been analyzed using 3D models and false-color depth maps in order to determine the exact number of small to medium-sized morphotypes present in the tracksites. RESULTS: The study of footprints (n = 93) recovered during the excavations has made it possible to identify and characterize the two morphotypes distinguished in the field. The gracile morphotype is mainly characterized by a high FL/FW ratio, high mesaxony, low divarication angles and clear, sharp claw marks, and phalangeal pads (2-3-4). By contrast, the robust morphotype is characterized by a lower FL/FW ratio, weaker mesaxony, slightly higher divarication angles and clear, sharp claw marks (when preserved), whereas the phalangeal pads are not clearly preserved although they might be present. DISCUSSION: The analysis does not allow the two morphotypes to be associated within the same morphological continuum. Thus, they cannot be extramorphological variations of similar tracks produced by a single trackmaker. Comparison of the two morphotypes with the larger morphotypes described in the formation (M. transjuranicus, J. curtedulensis, and Morphotype II) and the spatio-temporal relationships of the trackways suggest that the smaller morphotypes cannot reliably be considered as small individuals of any of the larger morphotypes. The morphometric data of some specimens of the robust morphotype (even lower values for the length/width ratio and mesaxony) suggest that more than one ichnotaxon might be represented within the robust morphotype. The features of the gracile morphotype (cf. Kalohipus isp.) are typical of “grallatorid” ichnotaxa with low mesaxony whereas those of the robust morphotype (cf. Therangospodus isp. and Therangospodus? isp.) are reminiscent of Therangospodus pandemicus. This work sheds new light on combining an analysis of variations in footprint morphology through 3D models and false-color depth maps, with the study of possible ontogenetic variations and the identification of small-sized tridactyl ichnotaxa for the description of new dinosaur tracks.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5885975
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher PeerJ Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-58859752018-04-06 A walk in the maze: variation in Late Jurassic tridactyl dinosaur tracks from the Swiss Jura Mountains (NW Switzerland) Castanera, Diego Belvedere, Matteo Marty, Daniel Paratte, Géraldine Lapaire-Cattin, Marielle Lovis, Christel Meyer, Christian A. PeerJ Paleontology BACKGROUND: Minute to medium-sized (footprint length (FL) less than 30 cm) tridactyl dinosaur tracks are the most abundant in the Late Jurassic tracksites of Highway A16 (Reuchenette Formation, Kimmeridgian) in the Jura Mountains (NW Switzerland). During excavations, two morphotypes, one gracile and one robust, were identified in the field. Furthermore, two large-sized theropod ichnospecies (Megalosauripus transjuranicus and Jurabrontes curtedulensis) and an ornithopod-like morphotype (Morphotype II) have recently been described at these sites. METHODS: The quality of morphological preservation (preservation grade), the depth of the footprint, the shape variation, and the footprint proportions (FL/footprint width (FW) ratio and mesaxony) along the trackways have been analyzed using 3D models and false-color depth maps in order to determine the exact number of small to medium-sized morphotypes present in the tracksites. RESULTS: The study of footprints (n = 93) recovered during the excavations has made it possible to identify and characterize the two morphotypes distinguished in the field. The gracile morphotype is mainly characterized by a high FL/FW ratio, high mesaxony, low divarication angles and clear, sharp claw marks, and phalangeal pads (2-3-4). By contrast, the robust morphotype is characterized by a lower FL/FW ratio, weaker mesaxony, slightly higher divarication angles and clear, sharp claw marks (when preserved), whereas the phalangeal pads are not clearly preserved although they might be present. DISCUSSION: The analysis does not allow the two morphotypes to be associated within the same morphological continuum. Thus, they cannot be extramorphological variations of similar tracks produced by a single trackmaker. Comparison of the two morphotypes with the larger morphotypes described in the formation (M. transjuranicus, J. curtedulensis, and Morphotype II) and the spatio-temporal relationships of the trackways suggest that the smaller morphotypes cannot reliably be considered as small individuals of any of the larger morphotypes. The morphometric data of some specimens of the robust morphotype (even lower values for the length/width ratio and mesaxony) suggest that more than one ichnotaxon might be represented within the robust morphotype. The features of the gracile morphotype (cf. Kalohipus isp.) are typical of “grallatorid” ichnotaxa with low mesaxony whereas those of the robust morphotype (cf. Therangospodus isp. and Therangospodus? isp.) are reminiscent of Therangospodus pandemicus. This work sheds new light on combining an analysis of variations in footprint morphology through 3D models and false-color depth maps, with the study of possible ontogenetic variations and the identification of small-sized tridactyl ichnotaxa for the description of new dinosaur tracks. PeerJ Inc. 2018-04-02 /pmc/articles/PMC5885975/ /pubmed/29629243 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.4579 Text en © 2018 Castanera et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Paleontology
Castanera, Diego
Belvedere, Matteo
Marty, Daniel
Paratte, Géraldine
Lapaire-Cattin, Marielle
Lovis, Christel
Meyer, Christian A.
A walk in the maze: variation in Late Jurassic tridactyl dinosaur tracks from the Swiss Jura Mountains (NW Switzerland)
title A walk in the maze: variation in Late Jurassic tridactyl dinosaur tracks from the Swiss Jura Mountains (NW Switzerland)
title_full A walk in the maze: variation in Late Jurassic tridactyl dinosaur tracks from the Swiss Jura Mountains (NW Switzerland)
title_fullStr A walk in the maze: variation in Late Jurassic tridactyl dinosaur tracks from the Swiss Jura Mountains (NW Switzerland)
title_full_unstemmed A walk in the maze: variation in Late Jurassic tridactyl dinosaur tracks from the Swiss Jura Mountains (NW Switzerland)
title_short A walk in the maze: variation in Late Jurassic tridactyl dinosaur tracks from the Swiss Jura Mountains (NW Switzerland)
title_sort walk in the maze: variation in late jurassic tridactyl dinosaur tracks from the swiss jura mountains (nw switzerland)
topic Paleontology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5885975/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29629243
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.4579
work_keys_str_mv AT castaneradiego awalkinthemazevariationinlatejurassictridactyldinosaurtracksfromtheswissjuramountainsnwswitzerland
AT belvederematteo awalkinthemazevariationinlatejurassictridactyldinosaurtracksfromtheswissjuramountainsnwswitzerland
AT martydaniel awalkinthemazevariationinlatejurassictridactyldinosaurtracksfromtheswissjuramountainsnwswitzerland
AT parattegeraldine awalkinthemazevariationinlatejurassictridactyldinosaurtracksfromtheswissjuramountainsnwswitzerland
AT lapairecattinmarielle awalkinthemazevariationinlatejurassictridactyldinosaurtracksfromtheswissjuramountainsnwswitzerland
AT lovischristel awalkinthemazevariationinlatejurassictridactyldinosaurtracksfromtheswissjuramountainsnwswitzerland
AT meyerchristiana awalkinthemazevariationinlatejurassictridactyldinosaurtracksfromtheswissjuramountainsnwswitzerland
AT castaneradiego walkinthemazevariationinlatejurassictridactyldinosaurtracksfromtheswissjuramountainsnwswitzerland
AT belvederematteo walkinthemazevariationinlatejurassictridactyldinosaurtracksfromtheswissjuramountainsnwswitzerland
AT martydaniel walkinthemazevariationinlatejurassictridactyldinosaurtracksfromtheswissjuramountainsnwswitzerland
AT parattegeraldine walkinthemazevariationinlatejurassictridactyldinosaurtracksfromtheswissjuramountainsnwswitzerland
AT lapairecattinmarielle walkinthemazevariationinlatejurassictridactyldinosaurtracksfromtheswissjuramountainsnwswitzerland
AT lovischristel walkinthemazevariationinlatejurassictridactyldinosaurtracksfromtheswissjuramountainsnwswitzerland
AT meyerchristiana walkinthemazevariationinlatejurassictridactyldinosaurtracksfromtheswissjuramountainsnwswitzerland