Muraenosaurus

Read more about the article Muraenosaurus
Restoration of the skeleton of Muraenosaurus in lateral view. From Andrews 1910.

Brown (1981) diagnosed Muraenosaurus as follows: "Plesiosauroids in which the teeth are ornamented with many longitudinal ridges; the dentary bears 19 to 22 teeth on each ramus; the premaxillae bear 5 teeth each, of which the 1st and 5th are small, and the 2nd to 4th are large; the most anterior maxilliary…

Continue ReadingMuraenosaurus

Marmornectes

Marmornectes is a pliosaur with a long and narrow snout from the Oxford Clay. It was described and named by Ketchum and Benson (2011a). The type and only specimen (BEDFM 1999.201) comprises a substantially complete skeleton including a partial skull. Marmornectes is similar to Peloneustes but possesses some basal characters that were…

Continue ReadingMarmornectes

Bishanopliosaurus

Read more about the article Bishanopliosaurus
Photo of Bishanopliosaurus on display in the Zigong Dinosaur Museum. Photo by Zhangzhugang. Used here under a CC BY 4.0 licence. The label says it is from "Dashanpu, Zigong", suggesting it isn't the type specimen (from Bishan County, Chongqing), but this could be a mistake.

Bishanopliosaurus is the most complete plesiosaur known from the Jurassic of Asia (Sato et al. 2003). The holotype specimen of the type species, B. youngi, is a partial postcranial skeleton of a juvenile individual from the Dongyuemiao Member of the Ziliujing Formation (Lower or Mid Jurassic) of Bishan County, Chongqing, China. It…

Continue ReadingBishanopliosaurus

Tricleidus

Read more about the article Tricleidus
Skull of Tricleidus in lateral view. From Brown (1981).

Tricleidus is a cryptoclidid from the Oxford Clay Formation of the UK. The holotype specimen (NHMUK R 3539) consists of disarticulated elements including most of skull and half the postcranium, from the Kosmoceras jasoni – Peltoceras athleta zones from the lowest deposits of the Oxford Clay Formation. The type and only species…

Continue ReadingTricleidus

Simolestes

Simolestes has variously been allied with the Pliosauridae and the Rhomaleosauridae. The most noticeable difference between Simolestes and the other pliosaur taxa from the Oxford Clay (Liopleurodon, Peloneustes, Pachycostasaurus), is its much shorter snout and mandibular symphysis, a character is shares with the Rhomaleosauridae. However, this is probably a convergent character. Older…

Continue ReadingSimolestes

Pachycostasaurus

Read more about the article Pachycostasaurus
Mounted skeleton of Pachycostasaurus in the Peterborough Museum. Photo by Adam Smith.

Pachycostasaurus is approximately 3.1 meters long. Its rib cage and vertebrae exhibit thickened bone (Cruickshank et al. 1996) a condition termed pachyostosis. This heavy ossification is unusual in plesiosaurs (another exception may include Kronosaurus), although it is common in basal sauropterygians, especially pachypleurosaurs. Pachycostasaurus probably used the extra ballast provided by its…

Continue ReadingPachycostasaurus

Liopleurodon

Read more about the article Liopleurodon
Mounted skeleton of Liopleurodon ferox in the Tubingen Museum, Germany (from Martill and Naish, 2000).

Liopleurodon is a pliosaur that hardly needs introduction since appearing as the villain in the BBC's 'Walking with Dinosaurs' TV series. This led to popular misconceptions about the size of Liopleurodon, which is known to have reached adult sizes in the region of seven metres long, nowhere near the gargantuan 25m estimate…

Continue ReadingLiopleurodon

Cryptoclidus

Read more about the article Cryptoclidus
Skeleton of Cryptoclidus in lateral view. From Brown (1981).

Cryptoclidus, often wrongly spelled 'Cryptocleidus' after Andrews (1909), is a moderately sized plesiosaur with adults about four metres long (Brown 1981). It is known from a large number of individual specimens from the Oxford Clay Formation. Fossils of Cryptoclidus are relatively common, and provide a complete ontogenetic sequence from very young to…

Continue ReadingCryptoclidus