Abstract

ABSTRACT A new elasmosaurid plesiosaur, Albertonectes vanderveldei, gen. et sp. nov., is described on the basis of an almost complete postcranial skeleton from the upper Campanian, Bearpaw Formation in Alberta, Canada. The new taxon is distinguished by a unique set of characters—76 cervicals, lateral longitudinal ridge on posterior-most cervicals, relatively wide clavicular arch, tapered ventral projection at the median symphysis of coracoids, pointed anterolateral projection of pubis, fused posterior-most caudal vertebrae, and a relatively slender humerus. Ninety-seven chert gastroliths were also recovered with the specimen, and their mean diameters range from <1 to 13.5 cm. Shape analysis indicates that most of the gastroliths were ingested in the vicinity of a beach environment. Evidence that the carcass was scavenged by sharks includes a tooth-marked coracoid, two shed Squalicorax sp. teeth, and small, localized disruptions to the skeleton. Preliminary phylogenetic analysis confirms the inclusion of Albertonectes in a clade comprised of ‘middle’ to Late Cretaceous, long-necked elasmosaurid plesiosaurs. The number of cervical vertebrae associated with different elasmosaur genera does not show any correlation with phylogeny. Both neck and total body length of Albertonectes are the longest among known elasmosaurs, and highlight the morphological extremes attained by this group of plesiosaurs.

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