From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Rebbachisauridae
Extinct family of dinosaurs
Extinct family of dinosaurs
- Agustinia
- Amazonsaurus
- Astigmasaura
- Campananeyen
- Cienciargentina
- Comahuesaurus
- Histriasaurus
- Lavocatisaurus
- Maraapunisaurus?
- Nopcsaspondylus
- Sidersaura
- Xenoposeidon?
- Zapalasaurus
- Khebbashia
- Limaysaurinae
- Cathartesaura
- Katepensaurus
- Limaysaurus
- Rayososaurus
- Rebbachisaurinae
- Demandasaurus
- Itapeuasaurus
- Katepensaurus?
- Nigersaurus
- Rebbachisaurus
- Tataouinea
- Limaysaurinae
Rebbachisauridae is a family of sauropod dinosaurs known from fragmentary fossil remains from the Cretaceous of South America, Africa, North America, Europe and possibly Central Asia.
Taxonomy
In 1990 sauropod specialist Jack McIntosh included the first known rebbachisaurid genus, the giant North African sauropod Rebbachisaurus, in the family Diplodocidae, subfamily Dicraeosaurinae, on the basis of skeletal details. With the discovery in subsequent years of a number of additional genera, it was realised that Rebbachisaurus and its relatives constituted a distinct group of dinosaurs. In 1997 the Argentine paleontologist José Bonaparte described the family Rebbachisauridae, and in 2011 Whitlock defined two new subfamilies within the group: Nigersaurinae and Limaysaurinae.
Khebbashia is a clade within Rebbachisauridae. Members of Khebbashia were medium-sized sauropods from the early Cretaceous period of South America, Africa and Europe.
The name "Khebbashia" is derived from "Khebbash" or "Khebbache", a Moroccan tribe that inhabited the region where the first rebbachisaurid specimen was found in North Africa. Khebbashia is defined as the least inclusive clade including Limaysaurus tessonei, Nigersaurus taqueti, and Rebbachisaurus garasbae. It therefore includes the rebbachisaurid subfamilies Rebbachisaurinae and Limaysaurinae, to the exclusion of more basal forms.
Rebbachisaurinae is a subfamily which is within both Rebbachisauridae and Khebbashia, defined to include Rebbachisaurus garasbae and exclude Limaysaurus tessonei, which belongs to its own subfamily, Limaysaurinae. It was first proposed as a rank by Jose Bonaparte in 1995, to include Rebbachisaurus. Some phylogenies however, include Rebbachisaurus in a clade with Limaysaurus, and thus the subfamily was not used. In 2015, a phylogenetic analysis was conducted, and it found Rebbachisaurus instead to be closer to Nigersaurus and related genera than Limaysaurus, and thus was used to replace Nigersaurinae as Rebbachisaurinae is the older term and is named after the genus used for the formation of the family Rebbachisauridae. The 2015 cladogram of Fanti et al. is shown below.
Evolutionary relationships and characteristics
Although all authorities agree that the rebbachisaurids are members of the superfamily Diplodocoidea, they lack the bifid (divided) cervical neural spines that characterise the diplodocids and dicraeosaurids, and for this reason are considered more primitive than the latter two groups. It is not yet known whether they share the distinctive whip-tail of the latter two taxa.
Rebbachisaurids are distinguished from other sauropods by their distinctive teeth, which have low angle, internal wear facets and asymmetrical enamel.
Unique among sauropods, at least some rebbachisaurids (such as Nigersaurus) are characterised by the presence of tooth batteries, similar to those of hadrosaur and ceratopsian dinosaurs. Such a feeding adaptation has thus developed independently three times among the dinosaurs.
So far, rebbachisaurids are known only from the middle and early part of the Late Cretaceous. They constitute the last known representatives of the diplodocoids, and lived alongside the titanosaurs until fairly late in the Cretaceous.
Timeline of genera descriptions
ImageSize = width:800px height:auto barincrement:15px PlotArea = left:10px bottom:50px top:10px right:10px
Period = from:1940 till:2050 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:50 start:1940 ScaleMinor = unit:year increment:10 start:1940 TimeAxis = orientation:hor AlignBars = justify
Colors =
- legends id:CAR value:claret id:ANK value:rgb(0.4,0.3,0.196) id:HER value:teal id:HAD value:green id:OMN value:blue id:black value:black id:white value:white id:1900s value:rgb(0.94,0.25,0.24) id:2000s value:rgb(0.2,0.7,0.79) id:2000syears value:rgb(0.52,0.81,0.91) id:1900syears value:rgb(0.95,0.56,0.45) id:1700s value:rgb(0.5,0.78,0.31) id:1700syears value:rgb(0.63,0.78,0.65) id:latecretaceous value:rgb(0.74,0.82,0.37) id:1800syears value:rgb(0.95,0.98,0.11) id:paleogene value:rgb(0.99,0.6,0.32) id:paleocene value:rgb(0.99,0.65,0.37) id:eocene value:rgb(0.99,0.71,0.42) id:oligocene value:rgb(0.99,0.75,0.48) id:1800s value:rgb(0.999999,0.9,0.1) id:miocene value:rgb(0.999999,0.999999,0) id:pliocene value:rgb(0.97,0.98,0.68) id:quaternary value:rgb(0.98,0.98,0.5) id:pleistocene value:rgb(0.999999,0.95,0.68) id:holocene value:rgb(0.999,0.95,0.88)
BarData= bar:eratop bar:space bar:periodtop bar:space bar:NAM1 bar:NAM2 bar:NAM3 bar:NAM4 bar:NAM5 bar:NAM6 bar:NAM7 bar:NAM8 bar:NAM9 bar:NAM10 bar:NAM11 bar:NAM12 bar:NAM13 bar:NAM14 bar:NAM15 bar:NAM16 bar:NAM17 bar:NAM18 bar:NAM19 bar:NAM20 bar:NAM21 bar:NAM22 bar:space bar:period bar:space bar:era
PlotData= align:center textcolor:black fontsize:M mark:(line,black) width:25 shift:(7,-4)
bar:periodtop from: 1940 till: 1950 color:1900syears text:40s from: 1950 till: 1960 color:1900syears text:50s from: 1960 till: 1970 color:1900syears text:60s from: 1970 till: 1980 color:1900syears text:70s from: 1980 till: 1990 color:1900syears text:80s from: 1990 till: 2000 color:1900syears text:90s from: 2000 till: 2010 color:2000syears text:00s from: 2010 till: 2020 color:2000syears text:10s from: 2020 till: 2030 color:2000syears text:20s from: 2030 till: 2040 color:2000syears text:30s from: 2040 till: 2050 color:2000syears text:40s
bar:eratop from: 1940 till: 2000 color:1900s text:20th from: 2000 till: 2050 color:2000s text:21st
PlotData= align:left fontsize:M mark:(line,white) width:5 anchor:till align:left
color:1900s bar:NAM1 at:1954 mark:(line,black) text:Rebbachisaurus color:1900s bar:NAM2 at:1996 mark:(line,black) text:Rayososaurus color:1900s bar:NAM3 at:1998 mark:(line,black) text:Histriasaurus color:1900s bar:NAM4 at:1999 mark:(line,black) text:Agustinia color:1900s bar:NAM5 at:1999 mark:(line,black) text:Nigersaurus color:2000s bar:NAM6 at:2003 mark:(line,black) text:Amazonsaurus color:2000s bar:NAM7 at:2004 mark:(line,black) text:Limaysaurus color:2000s bar:NAM8 at:2005 mark:(line,black) text:Cathartesaura color:2000s bar:NAM9 at:2006 mark:(line,black) text:Zapalasaurus color:2000s bar:NAM10 at:2007 mark:(line,black) text:Nopcsaspondylus color:2000s bar:NAM11 at:2007 mark:(line,black) text:Xenoposeidon color:2000s bar:NAM12 at:2011 mark:(line,black) text:Demandasaurus color:2000s bar:NAM13 at:2012 mark:(line,black) text:Comahuesaurus color:2000s bar:NAM14 at:2013 mark:(line,black) text:Katepensaurus color:2000s bar:NAM15 at:2013 mark:(line,black) text:Tataouinea color:2000s bar:NAM16 at:2018 mark:(line,black) text:Lavocatisaurus color:2000s bar:NAM17 at:2018 mark:(line,black) text:Maraapunisaurus color:2000s bar:NAM18 at:2019 mark:(line,black) text:Itapeuasaurus color:2000s bar:NAM19 at:2024 mark:(line,black) text:Campananeyen color:2000s bar:NAM20 at:2024 mark:(line,black) text:Sidersaura color:2000s bar:NAM21 at:2025 mark:(line,black) text:Astigmasaura color:2000s bar:NAM22 at:2025 mark:(line,black) text:Cienciargentina
PlotData= align:center textcolor:black fontsize:M mark:(line,black) width:25
bar:period from: 1940 till: 1950 color:1900syears text:40s from: 1950 till: 1960 color:1900syears text:50s from: 1960 till: 1970 color:1900syears text:60s from: 1970 till: 1980 color:1900syears text:70s from: 1980 till: 1990 color:1900syears text:80s from: 1990 till: 2000 color:1900syears text:90s from: 2000 till: 2010 color:2000syears text:00s from: 2010 till: 2020 color:2000syears text:10s from: 2020 till: 2030 color:2000syears text:20s from: 2030 till: 2040 color:2000syears text:30s from: 2040 till: 2050 color:2000syears text:40s
bar:era from: 1940 till: 2000 color:1900s text:20th from: 2000 till: 2050 color:2000s text:21st
References
- McIntosh, J. S., 1990, "Sauropoda" in The Dinosauria, Edited by David B. Weishampel, Peter Dodson, and Halszka Osmólska. University of California Press, pp. 345–401.
- Upchurch, P., Barrett, P.M. and Dodson, P. 2004. "Sauropoda". In The Dinosauria, 2nd edition. Weishampel, Dodson, and Osmólska (eds.). University of California Press, Berkeley. pp. 259–322.
- ------ (2005) "Overview of Sauropod Phylogeny and Evolution", in The Sauropods: Evolution and Paleobiology
- Wilson, J. A. and Sereno, P.C. (2005) "Structure and Evolution of a Sauropod Tooth Battery" in The Sauropods: Evolution and Paleobiology in Curry Rogers and Wilson, eds, 2005, The Sauropods: Evolution and Paleobiology, University of California Press, Berkeley,
References
- (2012). "A new basal rebbachisaurid (Sauropoda, Diplodocoidea) from the Early Cretaceous of the Neuquén Basin; evolution and biogeography of the group". Historical Biology.
- [[Paul Mannion. P. D. Mannion]], P. Upchurch, D. Schwarz and O. Wings. (2019). Taxonomic affinities of the putative [[titanosaur]]s from the [[Late Jurassic]] [[Tendaguru Formation]] of [[Tanzania]]: phylogenetic and biogeographic implications for [[eusauropod]] dinosaur evolution. ''[[Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society]]'' 185(3):784-909
- (2015). "New information on ''Tataouinea hannibalis'' from the Early Cretaceous of Tunisia and implications for the tempo and mode of rebbachisaurid sauropod evolution.". PLOS ONE.
- (2015). "New Information on ''Tataouinea hannibalis'' from the Early Cretaceous of Tunisia and Implications for the Tempo and Mode of Rebbachisaurid Sauropod Evolution". PLOS ONE.
- John A. Whitlock. (2011). "A phylogenetic analysis of Diplodocoidea (Saurischia: Sauropoda)". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Rebbachisauridae — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report