翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Ceres, West Virginia
・ Ceres, Western Cape
・ Ceresa
・ Ceresa albescens
・ Ceresana
・ Ceresara
・ CeresByen
・ Ceresco
・ Ceresco Township, Blue Earth County, Minnesota
・ Ceresco, Michigan
・ Ceresco, Nebraska
・ Ceresco, Wisconsin
・ Cereseto
・ Ceresfjellet
・ Ceresin
Ceresiosaurus
・ Ceresium compressipenne
・ Ceresium flavipes
・ Ceresium miserum
・ Ceresole
・ Ceresole Alba
・ Ceresole Reale
・ Ceresoli
・ Ceresota Building
・ Ceresville, Maryland
・ Ceretani
・ Cerete
・ Ceretes
・ Ceretes marcelserres
・ Ceretes thais


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Ceresiosaurus : ウィキペディア英語版
Ceresiosaurus


''Ceresiosaurus'', meaning "Lizard of Ceresio" (Ceresio is the name of the Lake Lugano, in Switzerland), is an extinct aquatic genus of lariosaurine nothosaurid sauropterygian known from the Middle Triassic (Anisian-Ladinian boundary) of Monte San Giorgio, southern Switzerland and northern Italy. The type species, ''Ceresiosaurus calcagnii'', was named by Bernhard Peyer in 1931. ''C. calcagnii'' is known from both the Cava superiore and Cava inferiore beds of the Lower Meride Limestone at Monte San Giorgio, dating to the latest Anisian of the Middle Triassic.〔 Rieppel (1998) suggested that the back then monospecific genus ''Ceresiosaurus'', is a junior synonym of the better known ''Lariosaurus'', yet he kept it type species as a separate species under the new combination ''L. calcagnii''. In 2004, however, this synonymy was objected by Hänni who described and name a second species of ''Ceresiosaurus'', ''C. lanzi'' - a separation supported by several other authors since. This species is known only from the stratigraphically younger Cassima beds of Monte San Giorgio, although also from the Lower Meride Limestone, dating to possibly the lowest Ladinian age. The species in a subtropical lagoonal environment with varying open marine influences, and alongside many related but smaller species of nothosaurids and pachypleurosaurids. ''Ceresiosaurus'' represents one of the largest vertebrate of up to 3 m snout-tail length from the very diversified paleoenvironment of the Middle Triassic Monte San Giorgio.
==Palaeobiology==

''Ceresiosaurus'' was much more elongated than its relatives, reaching in length, and had fully developed flippers with no trace of visible toes. It had multiple elongated phalanges, making the flippers much longer than in most other nothosaurs, and more closely resembling those of the later plesiosaurs. ''Ceresiosaurus'' also had the shortest skull of any known nothosaur, which further increased its resemblance to plesiosaurs.
Although possessing a long neck and tail, ''Ceresiosaurus'' may not have swum by undulating its body. Analysis of the bone structure of the hips and powerful tail suggest that it instead propelled itself through the water much like a penguin. The evidence of pachypleurosaurs in the preserved stomach of ''Ceresiosaurus'' remains lend credence to the theory of it being a fast swimmer.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Ceresiosaurus」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.