Morturneria
Morturneria is an extinct genus of plesiosaur from the Late Cretaceous of what is now Antarctica.
History of research
The Lopez de Bertodano Formation is located on Seymour Island, Antarctica, with exposures present in all but the northernmost third of the island. During the summers of 1981–1982, 1983–1984, and 1984–1985, paleontological expeditions recovered eight partial plesiosaur skeletons in the formation. One of these, TTU P9219, consisted of a skull and some cervical vertebrae. It was found in the upper part of the formation, informally known as the 'molluscan units', high up in a ravine. It was preserved within a tough, calcareous nodule, from which it was difficult to remove. While excavating the specimens, the dig teams faced difficulty in removing the strata above the fossils, due to the presence of permafrost. The cold temperatures also prevented the plaster from setting, so the teams used camp stoves and aluminium foil to heat it up, allowing it to harden. The specimen was prepared with the usage of power tools and acetic acid to remove the surrounding rock.In 1989, Sankar Chatterjee and Bryan Small named the new genus and species Turneria seymourensis to contain TTU P9219. The specific name refers to Seymour Island, while the generic name honored Dr. Mort Turner, who was interested in the paleontological studies taking place there. However, the name Turneria was preoccupied, already in use for a genus of hymenopteran insect. In light of this, Chatterjee and Benjamin Creisler published a new name for the plesiosaur, Morturneria, in 1994. As before, the generic name honors Mort Turner.
However, a 2003 study by Zulma Gasparini and colleagues found Morturneria to be so similar to Aristonectes, they found it most likely that it was merely a juvenile A. parvidens. Since Aristonectes was named first, they concluded that Morturneria was a junior synonym of this genus. In 2017, a study led by F. Robin O'Keefe reanalyzed the skull of Morturneria. While they agreed with Gasparini and colleagues that the specimen was a juvenile, they found it to be distinct from Aristonectes and a valid genus once more. They also found that the Texas Tech University collections from Seymour Island contain postcranial material from adult plesiosaurs that, while similar to Aristonectes, definitely belonged to a different taxon, further supporting the separation of the two genera. In a 2019 thesis, Elizabeth Lester assigned another specimen found by the expeditions that recovered the holotype of Morturneria seymourensis to the species. This specimen, TTU P9217, consists of more cervical vertebrae, a right humerus, a nearly complete left forelimb missing the proximal end of the humerus, and a left femur. Additionally, more material pertaining to the holotype was reported; a possible humeral head, an epipodial, a possible carpal, and three phalanges.