Akanthosuchus
Akanthosuchus is an extinct genus of alligatoroid crocodilian, and has been regarded as a possible alligatorine. Fossils are known from the Paleocene-aged Nacimiento Formation of the San Juan Basin in New Mexico, United States. The genus is represented by a partial skeleton and isolated osteoderms. The osteoderms have been described as distinctive, including both spike-shaped and blade-shaped elements.
History and description
Akanthosuchus is based on NMMNH NP-139, a partial skeleton lacking the skull. The specimen was found in a concretionary sandstone lens with the anterior portion eroding out. It was discovered in Torrejon Wash, northwestern Sandoval County, New Mexico. The hind legs, numerous back, hip, and tail vertebrae, and armor were the primary elements preserved. F. Michael O'Neill et al. described the genus in 1981. The type species is A. langstoni, honoring paleontologist Wann Langston Jr., known for his work on fossil crocodilians.Akanthosuchus was a moderately sized crocodilian. The thigh bone of NMMNH NP-139 was long, and the shin was long. However, this specimen may not have been fully grown. Based on growth rings, Hill and Lucas suggest that it was no younger than eight years old when it died. The tail may have been relatively short, given the reduction of bony projections on known tail vertebrae. The armor was unusual in having elongate spikes or broad blades. Its scutes came in four basic types: square, oval, bladed, and spiked. The spikes were nearly as tall as the base of their scutes were long, rising up to. They contacted only one other scute each, and may have been arranged in paired sets down the midline of the back and tail, and along the sides of the animal. Single rows of paired oval scutes may have filled in between the spiked rows. The bladed scutes, an extreme of the oval scute form, may have been found at the ends of the oval scute rows. The square scutes may have been restricted to one area, such as the neck and shoulders, or they may represent the belly armor.
Spiked and bladed scutes are not unknown among crocodilians, although no other known crocodilian had or has both. O'Neill and colleagues compared Akanthosuchus to Pinacosuchus, a crocodylomorph with spiked scutes known from the Late Cretaceous North Horn Formation of Utah, but it differed from Akanthosuchus in several ways: it was much smaller, it had less derived vertebrae, and it lacked bladed scutes.