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Words near each other
・ Macrozamia plurinervia
・ Macrozamia polymorpha
・ Macrozamia reducta
・ Macrozamia riedlei
・ Macrozamia secunda
・ Macrozamia spiralis
・ Macrozamia stenomera
・ Macrozamia viridis
・ MACRS
・ MacRuby
・ MacRumors
・ Macrurocampa
・ Macrurocyttus acanthopodus
・ Macruromys
・ Macruronus
Macrurosaurus
・ Macs
・ Macs (short story)
・ MACS J0025.4-1222
・ MACS J0647+7015
・ MACS J0717.5+3745
・ Macs Joy
・ MACS M3
・ MACS0416.1-2403
・ MACS0647-JD
・ MACS1149-JD
・ MACS3
・ MacsBug
・ MacScan
・ MacShane


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

''Macrurosaurus'' (meaning "large-tailed lizard") is the name given to a genus of dinosaur from the Early Cretaceous. It was a titanosauriform which lived in what is now Europe.
The genus ''Macrurosaurus'' was named by Harry Govier Seeley in 1869 but not yet described so that it remained a ''nomen nudum''.〔H.G. Seeley, 1869, ''Index to the Fossil Remains of Aves, Ornithosauria, and Reptilia, from the Secondary System of Strata, Arranged in the Woodwardian Museum of the University of Cambridge''. Deighton, Bell, & Co, Cambridge pp. 1-143〕 In 1876 Seeley described the type species, ''Macrurosaurus semnus'', making the name valid.〔H.G. Seeley, 1876, "On ''Macrurosaurus semnus'' (Seeley), a long tailed animal with procoelous vertebrae from the Cambridge Upper Greensand, preserved in the Woodwardian Museum of the University of Cambridge", ''Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London'' 32: 440-444〕 No other species are known. The generic name is derived from Greek ''makros'', "large", and ''oura'', "tail". The specific name is derived from Greek ''semnos'', "stately" or "impressive".
The holotype of ''Macrurosaurus'', SM B55630, consists of two series of caudal vertebrae found around 1864 near Cambridge, England in the Cambridge Greensand, strata themselves deposited during the Aptian but containing reworked fossil material dating perhaps from around 130 million years ago, the Barremian. The first was acquired by the Woodwardian Museum from William Farren who had it dug up at Coldhams Common. This series is made up of 25 proximal vertebrae. The second was found by Reverend W. Stokes-Shaw at a slightly more western location near Barton. It contained fifteen smaller distal vertebrae, from the tail end. Seeley, acting on the presumption that both finds belonged to the same species if not individual, combined the two series into one tail of about 4.5 metres length.
Other fragmentary fossils from England (''Acanthopholis platypus''), France and Argentina have later been referred to ''Macrurosaurus'' but the identity is today doubted.
''Macrurosaurus'' was by Seeley himself estimated to be about ten metres long. Often a length of around twelve metres (40 ft) is indicated in the popular literature. The vertebrae in front are procoelous, meaning that the vertebral centra are hollow at the front end and convex at the back. Those behind are amphicoelous: hollow at both ends. Seeley assumed that the full count of tail vertebrae would have been about fifty.
''Macrurosaurus'' was by Seeley assigned to the Dinosauria. Richard Lydekker in 1888 understood it belonged to the Sauropoda. In 1929 Friedrich von Huene referred it to the Titanosauridae. In recent years however, it has been commonly concluded that the species cannot be further determined than a more general Titanosauriformes. Also it is today often seen as a ''nomen dubium''.
==Notes==



抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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