Meyerasaurus

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The holotype specimen of Meyerasaurus (SMNS 12478) from the Posidonia-Schiefer, Holzmaden, Germany.

M. victor was originally described and figured by Fraas (1910). Historically, M. victor has been regarded as a species of Rhomaleosaurus and is often associated in the literature under the defunct name 'Thaumatosaurus'. See my article about this history of 'Thaumatosaurus' here. Smith and Vincent (2010) identified M. victor as generically distinct from…

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Macroplata

Macroplata is a rhomaleosaurid plesiosaur from the Lower Jurassic of Warwickshire, UK. Macroplata was named and briefly described by Swinton (1930a) based on a single skeleton from Harbury, Warwickshire, and the skeleton was redescribed in detail by Ketchum and Smith (2010). Photograph of Macroplata tenuiceps in situ in Harbury, Warwickshire. White (1940)…

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Liopleurodon

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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…

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Leptocleidus

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Skull of Leptocleidus capensis in lateral view (from Cruickshank, 1997)

Lower Cretaceous plesiosaurs are rare, so Leptocleidus is important because it fills a gap in the fossil record of plesiosaurians. Leptocleidus was once considered to be a late surviving member of the family Rhomaleosauridae but it has recently been reidentified as a close relative of polycotylids. The fossils of all known species…

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Kronosaurus

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Kronosaurus queenslandicus skeleton in lateral view.

Due to its large size and ferocious appearance, Kronosaurus is one of the most famous plesiosaurs. The iconic skeleton referred to Kronosaurus on display in the Museum of Comparative Zoology in Harvard is nicknamed 'plasterosaurus' because so much of it is reconstructed in plaster. About a third of the skeleton is plaster…

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Kimmerosaurus

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Skull of Kimmerosaurus. From Brown (1981).

Kimmerosaurus is a poorly known cryptoclidid plesiosaur known only from skull and neck material (Brown 1981, Brown et al. 1986). It differs from other plesiosaurs in the large number of needle-like teeth in its jaws, and in the form of its teeth, which are completely smooth and lack the longitidinal ridges present…

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Kaiwhekea

Kaiwhekea, also known as the 'Shag Point Plesiosaur', was classified as a cryptoclidid by Cruickshank and Fordyce (2002). More recent classifications regard it as an aristonectid. It has an unusually large number of small needle-like teeth and a shortened snout, much like the closely related Aristonectes. Kaiwhekea katiki is the type and…

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Hydrotherosaurus

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Articulated skeleton of Hydrotherosaurus. From Welles 1943.

Hydrotherosaurus is a long-necked elasmosaurid from California, USA. It is represented by one of the most complete elasmosaurid skeletons ever discovered, so Hydrotherosaurus is one of the best known members of this family. The almost complete type skeleton of Hydrotherosaurus was discovered in the Panoche Hills by Mr. Frank C. Paiva in…

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Eretmosaurus

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Skeleton of Eretmosaurus. Lithograph from Owen (1865).

The genus Eretmosaurus was erected for 'Plesiosaurus' rugosus by Seeley (1874). Eretmosaurus is a rogue taxon in cladistic analyses and researchers have been in disagreement about its taxonomic affinity. Eretmosaurus has been included in several different families: the Rhomaleosauridae based on the anatomy of its girdles (Persson 1963); the Pliosauridae (Brown 1981), the…

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Elasmosaurus

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Skeleton of Elasmosaurus from Cope (1869, revised version)

Elasmosaurus is one of the most widely recognised plesiosaur names and has become a stereotype for all elasmosaurids. However, it is relatively poorly known. The type and only known specimen of Elasmosaurus platyurus (ANSP 10081) includes the tip of the snout, occipital condyle, and the majority of the vertebral column. It is…

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Cryptoclidus

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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…

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Bobosaurus

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Bobosaurus reconstruction (from Dalla Vecchia 2018)

Bobosaurus shares many characteristics with plesiosaurs and is one of a number of recently discovered derived sauropterygians that bridge the gap between basal sauropterygians and plesiosaurians. The name honours the person who found the skeleton, Mr Roberto "Bobo" Rigo (Dalla Vecchia 2006). Skeleton of Bobosaurus, preserved in situ. From Dalla Vecchia (2006)…

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