Abstract

ABSTRACT The Lower to Middle Jurassic Kota Formation of India has yielded abundant yet disarticulated skeletal remains attributed to the basally diverging sauropod Kotasaurus yamanpalliensis. The hypodigm of Kotasaurus yamanpalliensis includes four ellipsoidal elements that we identify as tail clubs, based on morphological similarities to tail clubs attributed to two basal sauropods from China: Shunosaurus lii, for which a fully articulated tail series was recovered, and Omeisaurus tianfuensis. Detailed comparison of the Chinese and Indian tail clubs suggests that they are composed of up to three individual elements that fuse in adulthood. Computed tomography of the Indian tail clubs reveals their internal structure, which shows incremental growth lines as well as other features whose origin and function remain unknown. The Indian and Chinese tail clubs share a similar temporal range (Early to Middle Jurassic) and similar morphologies, which raises the question of whether sauropod tail clubs evolved once, multiple times, or were gained and then lost within basally diverging members of Sauropoda. We describe four new characters to reflect the morphological constituents of sauropod tail clubs known to date.

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