Another Brick in the “Murus”: Meet the newest Megaraptoran theropod, Murusraptor
South America has proven very lucrative in the last few decades when it comes to new theropod dinosaur discoveries from the Late Cretaceous. The list is impressive, with genera such as Megaraptor [1], Orkoraptor [2], Aerosteon (published in PLOS ONE in 2008) [3], and even Gualicho, published last week in PLOS ONE [4]. Gualicho aside, the other theropods listed above all belong to a clade known as Megaraptora, which also includes a member from Australia, Australovenator, published in 2009 in PLOS ONE [5] and Fukuiraptor from Japan [6]. Megaraptora are notable for their large size, characteristically large claws, and air-filled, birdlike, pneumatized bones. These critters have spurred many debates as to the evolutionary relationships of theropods. And now there is a new megaraptoran dinosaur on the block, Murusraptor barrosaensis from the Upper Cretaceous Sierra Barrosa Formation of Argentina, that could potentially impact previous hypotheses of relationships concerning these toothy titans.
The paper, published today in PLOS ONE by Rodolfa A. Coria from the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, Argentina, and Phillip Currie from the University of Alberta, Canada, describes this new megaraptoran dinosaur, first discovered in a canyon wall in 2001 (hence its name Murusraptor, meaning “Wall Raptor”). This site has produced a number of other terrestrial vertebrates, including turtles, crocodiles, saurischian dinosaurs, mammals, as well as some ichnofossils, such as bird footprints.
The specimen represents one of the most complete megaraptorans found, and was discovered partially articulated. Based on the position of the bones, it was lying on its right side when it died and was subsequently buried. It also showed some pathologic damage. In life, Murusraptor was approximately 6.5 meters long, and is notable for a long skull with small teeth. It’s bones were highly pneumatized. In fact, its sacral ribs were hollow and tubelike, a characteristic not seen in any other megaraptorans. The authors of this study suggest that this specimen was likely immature, but that it likely obtained a size larger than that of Megaraptor, more comparable to Aerosteon and Orkoraptor.