Abstract

Elasmosaurid plesiosaurians are renowned for their immensely long necks, and indeed, possessed the highest number of cervical vertebrae for any known vertebrate. Historically, the largest count has been attributed to the iconic Elasmosaurus platyurus from the Late Cretaceous of Kansas, but estimates for the total neck series in this taxon have varied between published reports. Accurately determining the number of vertebral centra vis-à-vis the maximum length of the neck in plesiosaurians has significant implications for phylogenetic character designations, as well as the inconsistent terminology applied to some osteological structures. With these issues in mind, we reassessed the holotype of E. platyurus as a model for standardizing the debated cervical-dorsal transition in plesiosaurians, and during this procedure, documented a “lost” cervical centrum. Our revision also advocates retention of the term “pectorals” to describe the usually three or more distinctive vertebrae close to the cranial margin of the forelimb girdle that bear a functional rib facet transected by the neurocentral suture, and thus conjointly formed by both the parapophysis on the centrum body and diapophysis from the neural arch (irrespective of rib length). This morphology is unambiguously distinguishable from standard cervicals, in which the functional rib facet is borne exclusively on the centrum, and dorsals in which the rib articulation is situated above the neurocentral suture and functionally borne only by the transverse process of the neural arch. Given these easily distinguishable definitions, the maximum number of neck vertebrae preserved in E. platyurus is 72; this is only three vertebrae shorter than the recently described Albertonectes, which together with E. platyurus constitute the “longest necked” animals ever to have lived.

Highlights

  • The Late Cretaceous plesiosaurian (Plesiosauria, Sauropterygia) Elasmosaurus platyurus from the Lower Campanian Sharon Springs Formation of western Kansas represents one of the most commonly reconstructed Mesozoic fossils

  • Its global fame has stemmed from the classical plesiosaurian neck, which is exceptionally long in E. platyurus and manifests amongst the highest number of individual cervical vertebrae found in any living or extinct vertebrate [1]

  • The holotype specimen (Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia [ANSP] 10081) of E. platyurus is widely recognized as a subject of controversy, which began with its inaugural presentation at the March 24th 1868 meeting of the ANSP by the eminent palaeontologist Edward Drinker Cope ([2]: p. 92)

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Summary

Introduction

The Late Cretaceous plesiosaurian (Plesiosauria, Sauropterygia) Elasmosaurus platyurus from the Lower Campanian Sharon Springs Formation of western Kansas represents one of the most commonly reconstructed Mesozoic fossils. Sachs [1] identified similar conditions in ANSP 10081, and broken remnants of fused rib/neural arch facets (Fig. 1A1, C), and thickened and rounded articular surface edges (Fig. 1D) are detectable on the ‘‘K’’ centrum, which we conclude is probably part of the same individual.

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