Abstract

The African terrestrial fossil record has been limited in its contribution to our understanding of both regional and global Cretaceous paleobiogeography, an interval of significant geologic and macroevolutionary change. A common component in Cretaceous African faunas, titanosaurian sauropods diversified into one of the most specious groups of dinosaurs worldwide. Here we describe the new titanosaurian Mnyamawamtuka moyowamkia gen. et sp. nov. from the Mtuka Member of the Galula Formation in southwest Tanzania. The new specimen preserves teeth, elements from all regions of the postcranial axial skeleton, parts of both appendicular girdles, and portions of both limbs including a complete metatarsus. Unique traits of M. moyowamkia include the lack of an interpostzygapophyseal lamina in posterior dorsal vertebrae, pronounced posterolateral expansion of middle caudal centra, and an unusually small sternal plate. Phylogenetic analyses consistently place M. moyowamkia as either a close relative to lithostrotian titanosaurians (e.g., parsimony, uncalibrated Bayesian analyses) or as a lithostrotian and sister taxon to Malawisaurus dixeyi from the nearby Aptian? Dinosaur Beds of Malawi (e.g., tip-dating Bayesian analyses). M. moyowamkia shares a few features with M. dixeyi, including semi-spatulate teeth and a median lamina between the neural canal and interpostzygapophyseal lamina in anterior dorsal vertebrae. Both comparative morphology and phylogenetic analyses support Mnyamawamtuka as a distinct and distant relative to Rukwatitan bisepultus and Shingopana songwensis from the younger Namba Member of the Galula Formation with these results largely congruent with newly constrained ages for the Mtuka Member (Aptian–Cenomanian) and Namba Member (Campanian). Coupled with recent discoveries from the Dahkla Oasis, Egypt (e.g., Mansourasaurus shahinae) and other parts of continental Afro-Arabia, the Tanzania titanosaurians refine perspectives on the development of African terrestrial faunas throughout the Cretaceous—a critical step in understanding non-marine paleobiogeographic patterns of Africa that have remained elusive until the past few years.

Highlights

  • The Cretaceous fossil record of Afro-Arabia remains an active area of research from both regional and global paleobiogeographic perspectives [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16]

  • Outside of Africa, other putative early titanosaurians or closely related non-titanosaurian titanosauriformes are not as well represented anatomically and their descriptions are usually based on a certain skeletal region or exhibit a less complete skeleton compared to M. moyowamkia

  • The two members are superficially similar in faunal composition at higher taxonomic rankings, M. moyowamkia is decisively distinct from both R. bisepultus and S. songwensis based on anatomical comparisons of currently known common elements

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Summary

Introduction

The Cretaceous fossil record of Afro-Arabia remains an active area of research from both regional and global paleobiogeographic perspectives [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16]. A partial middle caudal vertebra and two unidentified elements recovered from the Aptian–Albian of Italy have been proposed to be of lithostrotian affinities [42], and to be linked with the Afro-Malagasy titanosaurians M. dixeyi (Aptian of Malawi) and Rapetosaurus krausei (Maastrichtian of Madagascar) These recent titanosaurian discoveries are encouraging, regardless of completeness, as they support an Early Cretaceous origin for titanosaurians during this poorly sampled interval [17, 29]. Dinosaur Beds of Malawi and other Afro-Arabian sauropod bearing strata This new species provides a window into the early evolutionary history of titanosaurian sauropods with one of the best represented skeletons of an individual titanosaurian that includes information from most regions of the body

Materials and methods
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