Rebbachisaurus


Rebbachisaurus is a genus of sauropod dinosaur of the superfamily Diplodocoidea, that lived during the Early–Late Cretaceous period in Africa about 99 million years ago. Remains attributed to Rebbachisaurus have been found in Morocco, Niger, Algeria and Tunisia, although only the Moroccan remains can be referred to the genus without doubt. The discovery of Rayososaurus, a South American sauropod nearly identical to Rebbachisaurus, supports the theory that there was still a land connection between Africa and South America during the Early Cretaceous, long after it was commonly thought the two continents had separated.

History of discovery

In 1954, Rene Lavocat discovered the holotype specimen of Rebbachisaurus, which consists of ten ribs, the right shoulder blade, eleven vertebrae, the sacrum, a humerus, and two bones probably belonging to the pelvis, in the Aoufous Formation at Gara Sba, Errachidia in Morocco. He named the type species R. garasbae during the same year but only the shoulder blade and a single vertebra from the string of eleven were initially described, very briefly and without illustrations. The fossils were left undescribed and neglected until 2015, when Jeffrey Wilson and Ronan Allain cleaned the holotype and described the remaining fossils that Lavocat never described in 1954. A second specimen, consisting of a partial vertebra measuring up to tall if complete has also been assigned to R. garasbae.
A second species was named by Lapparent in 1960, Rebbachisaurus tamesnensis. The type specimen, collected by Lapparent in the Gall locality, Irhazer Shale, supposedly composed of two humeri and two femora, and a second specimen composed of four isolated teeth, a dentary fragment with three teeth, over 100 vertebrae, six chevrons, 12 ribs, 5 scapulae, an ilium, two ischia, and numerous limb elements, but however, the material of this taxon was collected from multiple localities across the Sahara, such as several sites in the Elrhaz Formation of Niger, and is not referrable to Rebbachisaurus. R. tamesnensis was probably a synonym or a chimera of Nigersaurus taqueti, although some authors consider R. tamesnensis to be a synonym of Jobaria, the only known valid sauropod from Tiouraren.
A third species was named by Calvo and Salgado in 1995, Rebbachisaurus tessonei. It was discovered in the Candeleros Formation in Argentina, near to where the holotype of Giganotosaurus carolinii was discovered. This species was later moved to the new genus Limaysaurus in 2004.

Description

In 2010, Gregory S. Paul estimated Rebbachisaurus at and. Holtz gave a bigger length of. In 2020 Molina-Pérez and Larramendi gave a larger estimation of 26 meters and 40 tonnes. It possessed a small head, a long, graceful neck and a whiplike tail. Rebbachisaurus is distinguished from other sauropods by its unusually tall, ridged back and the spine or sail that lay atop its back, distinguished by the tall ridges of the preserved dorsal vertebrae of the holotype and other specimens.

Classification

Below is a cladogram following the 2013 analysis by Fanti and colleagues, which confirmed the placement of Rebbachisaurus as a basal rebbachisaurid.
A 2015 cladistic study by Wilsona and the French palaeontologist Ronan Allain found Rebbachisaurus itself to group with the nigersaurines, and the authors suggested that Nigersaurinae was therefore a junior synonym of Rebbachisaurinae.

Paleoecology

The most common vertebrate remains which coexisted alongside R. garasbae in the Aoufous belong to the elasmobranch fish Onchopristis numidus. Another seven elasmobranchs are reported: Asteracanthus aegyptiacus, Distobatus nutiae, Tribodus sp., Lissodus sp., Haimirichia amonensis, Cretoxyrhinidae indet., and Marckgrafia lybica. Lungfish fossils are referred to Ceratodus humei and Neoceratodus africanus. Coelacanth remains are referred to Mawsonia lavocati and to the genus Axelrodichthys. Several taxa of Cladistia and two genera of seminiomorphs are recovered in the Kem Kem beds. Teleosteans are represented by Cladocyclus pankowskii, Palaeonotopterus greenwoodi, Erfoudichthys rosae and Concavotectum moroccensis. Amphibians are also present: Kababisha sp., the pipid frog Oumtkoutia anae and non-pipids frogs. Turtles are represented by several species: Dirqadim schaefferi, the podocnemidids Hamadachelys escuilliei, the bothremydids Galianemys whitei and G. emringeri, and the araripemydids Araripemys sp. Crocodilians are commonly found; four species are present: Elosuchus cherifiensis, a genus belonged to the Trematochampsidae, Araripesuchus rattoides and Laganosuchus maghrebensis.
Rebbachisaurus garasbae coexisted with many dinosaurs, including an ornithischian and an unnamed basal theropod, both only known from footprints. Among theropods, two carcharodontosaurids, one spinosaurid, one coelurosaur, an unnamed abelisaur and an unnamed dromaeosaur also coexist with Rebbachisaurus.
Pterosaurs are also present, although their fossils are extremely rare and enigmatic: an azhdarchid, an ornithocheirid, a tapejarid and a pteranodontid are known to have coexisted with Rebbachisaurus.