4.4 Article

Early Cretaceous (Berriasian) birds and pterosaurs from the Cornet bauxite mine, Romania

期刊

PALAEONTOLOGY
卷 54, 期 -, 页码 79-95

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-4983.2010.00997.x

关键词

Archaeopteryx; Neornithes; Palaeocursornis; Eurolimnornis; pterodactyloids; dsungaripterids; azhdarchids

资金

  1. University College Dublin

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We revisit a small but extremely significant collection of bird and pterosaur bones from the Lower Cretaceous (Berriasian) of western Romania. These fossils were collected in the late 1970s and early 1980s from a Lower Cretaceous (Berriasian) conglomerate lens deep in a bauxite mine at Cornet, close to the city of Oradea, Romania, and they caused a sensation when first described. Some fossils were initially ascribed to the early bird genus Archaeopteryx as well as to the modern clade Neornithes, an astonishing avian assemblage if correct. Described pterosaurs include dsungaripterids and a cervical vertebra that is likely the oldest azhdarchid pterosaur known from Europe and perhaps the world. Not only does the Cornet azhdarchid support an Eurasian origin for this clade, it is also significant because of its size: it is one of the smallest representatives of this pterosaur clade yet reported. Aside from their phylogenetic affinities, these unique Romanian fossils are also important because of their age; in particular, very few birds are known globally from the earliest Cretaceous. Re-examination of collections in Oradea confirms the presence of both birds and pterosaurs in the Cornet bauxite: although the fragmentary bird remains are mostly indeterminate, one record of a hesperornithiform is confirmed. There is no evidence for Archaeopteryx at the Cornet site while the two supposed neornithines (Palaeocursornis biharicus Kessler and Jurcsak and Eurolimnornis corneti Kessler and Jurcsak) are based on undiagnostic remains and are here regarded as nomina dubia.

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