Abstract

ABSTRACT We redescribe and present newly excavated sauropod material from the Lower Cretaceous Cloverly Formation of Wyoming that we refer to the titanosauriform Sauroposeidon proteles. In contrast to previous hypotheses that it was a brachiosaurid, we assert that Sauroposeidon is a member of the Somphospondyli on the basis of numerous features. Thus, the mid-Cretaceous disappearance of sauropods from the North American fossil record concerned both brachiosaurids and somphospondylans. We find claims for titanosaurs in the Early Cretaceous of North America to be unsubstantiated. The latest register of Sauroposeidon and other Early Cretaceous North American sauropods (before the ‘sauropod hiatus’) occurs in or below the coastal units marking transgression of the Western Interior Seaway, whereas many ecologically disparate dinosaur groups are present both below and above this boundary in the same geologic units that sauropods are found in. The presence of these through-ranging groups with sauropods before and after sauropod absence suggests that appropriate sauropod-bearing environments were present into the Late Cretaceous, implying that the disappearance of sauropods is not attributable to taphonomic or sampling bias. Furthermore, field observations of the Cloverly Formation indicate that Cretaceous pre-hiatus sauropods inhabited near-coastal environments, which were abundant in the western United States well after the start of the hiatus. The start of the sauropod hiatus is interpreted as the result of a genuine continent-wide extinction, coincident with the appearance of (and perhaps attributable to competition with) advanced ornithischian herbivores, decrease in habitat due to the incursion of the Western Interior Seaway, or both.

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