Comahuesaurus
Comahuesaurus is a genus of sauropod dinosaur of the family Rebbachisauridae. It was found in the Lohan Cura Formation in Argentina, and lived during the Early Cretaceous . The type species is C. windhauseni, named for Anselmo Windhausen, who contributed significantly to the geological study of Patagonia.
Discovery and naming
The holotype of Comahuesaurus, given the specimen number MOZ-PV 6722, was discovered on the northern slope of a locality called Cerro Aguada del Leon in the south-central area of the Neuquén Basin, which corresponds to the Lohan Cura Formation. It was originally assigned to Limaysaurus sp. by Leonardo Salgado and colleagues in 2004. Despite being referred to an existing genus, the authors remarked that there were significant enough anatomical differences to justify the possible naming of a new species. The discovery and preparation of additional specimens from the same bone bed as the holotype led a team of authors, including José Luis Carballidoa, Leonardo Salgadob, Diego Pola, José Ignacio Canudod, and Alberto Garridoe, to describe the new material and create the new genus Comahuesaurus to contain these remains.Description
The holotype of Comahuesaurus, MOZ-PV 6722, consists only of a single neural arch from a vertebra of the lower-back. However, abundant additional material was discovered from the same bone bed, and the anatomy of these additional bones were used to diagnose the new species. The authors concluded they all belonged to a single taxon, but since the exact number of individuals preserved is not known, the holotype was restricted to the single bone originally reported by Salgado.Comahuesaurus is known from abundant material compared to other rebbachisaurids. Bones from at least three individuals were excavated from the type locality and they include: 37 caudal vertebrae, three partial dorsal vertebrae, part of a sternum, a coracoid, a complete right humerus, part of an ilium, a complete pubis bone, five ischia, two left and three right femora, part of a tibia, and a left fibula. Fragmentary remains of humeri, pubes, femora were also identified. The authors did not provide a full size estimate for Comahuesaurus, but they did describe the humerus as being long and the femur as being long.
The authors of its description distinguished Comahuesaurus from all other rebbachisaurids by the following autapomorphies: a thin keel on the bottom of the dorsal vertebrae, long prezygapophyses, several distinctive laminae on the anterior dorsal vertebrae, well-developed fossae on the front caudal vertebrae, short transverse processes on the caudal vertebrae, a very robust humerus, a straight shaft of the ischium, and an unconstricted iliac peduncle.