April 8, 2008

Raeticodactylus

9:34 pm
  • Raeticodactylus filisurensis
  • A quick vector sketch of the head of
    Raeticodactylus filisurensis
  • New pterosaur: Raeticodactylus filisurensis
  • Name means: (Wing) Finger from the village of Filisur, in Raetia (the old name for the Swiss Canton Grisons, where it was found)
  • Relations: Basal pterosaur
  • Location: Eastern Switzerland
  • Age: Late Triassic, ~203,000,000 years ago
  • Material: Nearly complete skull, partial postcrania
  • Wingspan: 135cm (~4.5 feet)
  • Info: The oldest known pterosaur fossils come from late in the Triassic period, when this finger-winged group of reptiles first took to the skies. Newly-described Raeticodactylus adds to the handful of currently known Triassic pterosaurs. Raeticodactylus sported a unique crest above its nose, a deeply-keeled lower jaw, and a unique combination of teeth—fangs at the front of its mouth with wrinkled enamel on the inside, and crunching teeth further back in its jaws tipped with three to five cusps. Its limbs were long and thin compared to its contemporaries, giving it about twice the wingspan of the most famous Triassic pterosaur, Eudimorphodon ranzii. And, oddly enough, the head of its femur is offset 90° from the shaft, suggesting an upright stance more similar to that of dinosaurs than other pterosaurs.
  • Reference: Stecher, R. 2008. A new Triassic pterosaur from Switzerland (Central Austroalpine, Grisons), Raeticodactylus filisurensis gen. et sp. nov. Swiss Journal of Geosciences doi: 10.1007/s00015-008-1252-6.
  • Web coverage:

—Matt Celeskey.

December 16, 2007

More on the Triassic Exhibit

6:25 pm

A little more news on the upcoming Triassic exhibit at the day job—Discovery News writer Larry O’Hanlon met with the NMMNHS Triassic Team last week, and has posted a teaser article up on his blog, Earth Impacts, with the promise of more to come.

New Mexican Erythrosuchian

The post includes a couple of illustrations done for the hall: a rendering of the early mammal Adelobasileus by illustrator Mary Sundstrom, and my own painting of a large archosauriform known from a few dozen well-weathered fossils from the Middle Triassic of New Mexico. The restoration (shown above) is based largely on big erythrosuchian predators like Erythrosuchus and Shansisuchus (from South Africa and China, respectively).

—Matt Celeskey.

December 11, 2007

The Upcoming NMMNHS Triassic Exhibit

7:33 pm

The Albuquerque Tribune ran a story today on the project that’s been keeping me busy at the day job: a new Triassic Exhibit opening this March at the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science.

This is the project I’ve been looking forward to working on since I started at the museum almost a decade ago, and finally all the pieces have come together to pull it off.  Everyone involved in the exhibit is itching to show off some the fantastic Triassic fossils from the museum collections. The article only hits some of the highlights: this photo shows a beautifully preserved young Coelophysis from the Museum’s Ghost Ranch block (read the article for more Coelophysis-as-cannibal news). Another picture shows a the beginnings of a life-sized model of a New Mexican erythrosuchian, while the final position of one of the big stars remains tastefully hidden until the opening.

I’m not certain how much I’ll be able to share here until the exhibit opens, but I’ll definitely pass along any info that’s been made public before then.

—Matt Celeskey.

November 8, 2007

More Phyto-sketches

7:45 am

Phytosaur skull

A couple more sketches from my ongoing studies of phytosaurs. The one above is from a four foot long skull of the big pseudopalatine Redondasuchus (the front half and teeth are reconstructed, but they show nicely the heterodonty discussed in the last post). Below is a quick smudgy sketch of a Pseudopalatus cruising along in a “high-walk.” Overall I think the armor looks a touch more convincing than that portrayed in the full-body sketch of Parasuchus from last time:

A high-walking phytosaur

—Matt Celeskey.

October 21, 2007

Phytosaur portraits

5:36 pm

The phytosaur Parasuchus

As I’ve hinted at in previous posts, I’m thinking a lot about phytosaurs lately. These Late Triassic predators are (literally) looming large in a project I’m involved with for the day job, and I’ve had the sketchbook out in an attempt to wrap my head around the overall proportions and life appearances of these ancient archosaurs.

The first thing you tend to notice about phytosaurs is how much they look like modern crocodiles. Technically, crocs are the closest living relatives of phytosaurs, but there are so many animals between the two groups that are distinctly un-crocodile-like in overall form that their similarities are likely due to convergence more than kinship.

Still, the overall resemblance between the two groups is striking, and oftentimes crocodilians become the go-to substitutes for reconstructing phytosaurs. Some restorations are more clearly crocodile-based than others, but nearly all (mine included) show some degree of crocodilian influence. I suppose this could be considered artistic laziness (or, more charitably, artistic tradition), but I think that a distant but demonstrable relationship coupled with convergent forms and habits make a certain degree of crocodile-emulation justifiable. However, if any phytosaur-workers out there have other ideas about how these animals should look, I’d be thrilled to incorporate any comments into future restorations.

The main way that you can tell if an artist has drawn a phytosaur or crocodile is by looking for the nostrils. The nostrils of crocodiles are situated at the tip of the snout, while in phytosaurs, the nostrils are farther back, in some cases just in front of their eyes. The phytosaur at the top left of this post is Parasuchus (”near crocodile”), one of the earliest and most primitive (or, to be phylogenetically correct, least derived) forms. The nostrils of Parasuchus, while further back than any crocodile, lie further forward than they do in more advanced phytosaurs, like Angistorhinus, pictured below.

The head of Angistorhinus

Angistorhinus (”narrow snout”) was a contemporary of Parasuchus, but was more advanced in at least two obvious respects. First, the nostrils of Angistorhinus are situated much further back on the snout, raised in a little hump just in front of its eyes. Secondly, the teeth of Angistorhinus are differentiated depending on their location in the mouth. At the front of the jaws, the teeth are large and stout, built for grabbing and crushing prey. Teeth along the main length of the jaw are small, slender cones, excellent for catching small, slippery prey and working it toward the back of the throat. At the back of the jaw (and difficult to see in this closed-mouthed view), the teeth are flattened triangular wedges, well-suited to shearing off chunks of flesh from animals too large to swallow whole. This heterodont (”different-toothed”) condition presumably helped Angistorhinus tackle a wider variety of prey than than the simpler-toothed Parasuchus.

This second sketch is the first study for a series of portraits, restoring the faces of phytosaurs known from New Mexico and the U.S. Southwest. Focusing on the heads of these animals is probably the most accurate way they can be portrayed, as North American phytosaurs are known from an abundance of well-preserved skulls but, sadly, very few examples of reconstruction-ready, articulated postcrania. These sketches will end up becoming full color paintings for an interpretive display at the day job. Throughout the process, however, I hope to share more of my preliminary drawings and sketches with readers here.

—Matt Celeskey.