Neuquensaurus robustus ( Huene, 1929 )

Otero, Alejandro, 2010, The appendicular skeleton of Neuquensaurus, a Late Cretaceous saltasaurine sauropod from Patagonia, Argentina, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 55 (3), pp. 399-426 : 401

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2009.0099

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/9B639641-FFC8-FFE1-FF02-FA1251D6FD7B

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Neuquensaurus robustus ( Huene, 1929 )
status

 

Neuquensaurus robustus ( Huene, 1929) nomen dubium

Lectotype: Left ulna (MLP−CS 1094), right ulna (MLP−CS 1095), left radius (MLP−CS 1171), left femur (MLP−CS 1480) ( Bonaparte and Gasparini 1978).

Remarks.—All currently materials referred to the appendicular skeleton of N. australis mentioned by Lydekker (1893), Huene (1929), Powell (2003), and Salgado et al. (2005) are listed in Appendix 1, as well as those specimens referred by Huene (1929) and Powell (2003) to N. robustus . The new specimens not yet published are also included in Appendix 1. In some cases, the original remains are presumed to be missing, so interpretations were based on illustrations in Huene (1929). In the worst cases, neither material nor drawings were available at all (see Appendix 1 for details).

Stratigraphic and geographic range.—( Fig. 1A View Fig ) The holotype and limb elements of “ Titanosaurus ” australis studied by Lydekker (1893) come from Neuquén. Unfortunately, Lydekker did not give a more precise location of the bones nor the specific stratigraphic position. The materials of “ T ”. australis and “ T ”. robustus studied by Huene (1929) come from General Roca and Cinco Saltos (“Gobernación de Río Negro ”, currently Río Negro Province), from strata belonging to the “Dinosaurier schichten” ( Keidel 1917). Those “Dinosaurs beds” where Neuquensaurus ’ remains were found correspond to the Anacleto Formation (“Senonense inferior”, Huene 1929: 11). The specimen of N. australis and associated elements cited by Salgado et al. (2005) were recovered from Cinco Saltos, Río Negro Province (top of Anacleto Formation, early Campanian) ( Salgado et al. 2005).

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF