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The northernmost sauropod record in the Northern Hemisphere. / Averianov, Alexander O.; Skutschas, Pavel P.; Schellhorn, Rico; Lopatin, Alexey V.; Kolosov, Petr N.; Kolchanov, Veniamin V.; Vitenko, Dmitry D.; Grigoriev, Dmitry V.; Martin, Thomas.

In: Lethaia, 27.11.2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Averianov, AO, Skutschas, PP, Schellhorn, R, Lopatin, AV, Kolosov, PN, Kolchanov, VV, Vitenko, DD, Grigoriev, DV & Martin, T 2019, 'The northernmost sauropod record in the Northern Hemisphere', Lethaia. https://doi.org/10.1111/let.12362

APA

Averianov, A. O., Skutschas, P. P., Schellhorn, R., Lopatin, A. V., Kolosov, P. N., Kolchanov, V. V., Vitenko, D. D., Grigoriev, D. V., & Martin, T. (2019). The northernmost sauropod record in the Northern Hemisphere. Lethaia. https://doi.org/10.1111/let.12362

Vancouver

Averianov AO, Skutschas PP, Schellhorn R, Lopatin AV, Kolosov PN, Kolchanov VV et al. The northernmost sauropod record in the Northern Hemisphere. Lethaia. 2019 Nov 27. https://doi.org/10.1111/let.12362

Author

Averianov, Alexander O. ; Skutschas, Pavel P. ; Schellhorn, Rico ; Lopatin, Alexey V. ; Kolosov, Petr N. ; Kolchanov, Veniamin V. ; Vitenko, Dmitry D. ; Grigoriev, Dmitry V. ; Martin, Thomas. / The northernmost sauropod record in the Northern Hemisphere. In: Lethaia. 2019.

BibTeX

@article{2a737090fd0a415a94e0ccaec4f91ddb,
title = "The northernmost sauropod record in the Northern Hemisphere",
abstract = "Isolated sauropod teeth from the Early Cretaceous Teete locality in Yakutia (Eastern Siberia, Russia) are the only evidence that sauropods lived in high latitudes (palaeolatitude estimate of N 62 degrees) in the Northern Hemisphere. The spatulate broad tooth crowns of adult individuals lack marginal denticles while these are present in a juvenile tooth. The teeth have overlapping facets and likely belong to a basal macronarian. The juvenile tooth indicates that sauropods reproduced in high latitudes and possibly stayed there around the year. The Teete vertebrate assemblage comprises both endothermic, or presumably endothermic tetrapods (theropod dinosaurs, tritylodontids and mammals), and ectothermic tetrapods (salamanders, turtles, choristoderes and lizards), but no crocodyliforms. This suggests a temperate climate, with an annual mean temperature well above freezing level but below 14 degrees C.",
keywords = "Asia, Cretaceous, Dinosauria, polar dinosaurs, Sauropoda, FAUNA, SIBERIA, POLAR DINOSAURS, 1ST RECORD",
author = "Averianov, {Alexander O.} and Skutschas, {Pavel P.} and Rico Schellhorn and Lopatin, {Alexey V.} and Kolosov, {Petr N.} and Kolchanov, {Veniamin V.} and Vitenko, {Dmitry D.} and Grigoriev, {Dmitry V.} and Thomas Martin",
year = "2019",
month = nov,
day = "27",
doi = "10.1111/let.12362",
language = "English",
journal = "Lethaia",
issn = "0024-1164",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The northernmost sauropod record in the Northern Hemisphere

AU - Averianov, Alexander O.

AU - Skutschas, Pavel P.

AU - Schellhorn, Rico

AU - Lopatin, Alexey V.

AU - Kolosov, Petr N.

AU - Kolchanov, Veniamin V.

AU - Vitenko, Dmitry D.

AU - Grigoriev, Dmitry V.

AU - Martin, Thomas

PY - 2019/11/27

Y1 - 2019/11/27

N2 - Isolated sauropod teeth from the Early Cretaceous Teete locality in Yakutia (Eastern Siberia, Russia) are the only evidence that sauropods lived in high latitudes (palaeolatitude estimate of N 62 degrees) in the Northern Hemisphere. The spatulate broad tooth crowns of adult individuals lack marginal denticles while these are present in a juvenile tooth. The teeth have overlapping facets and likely belong to a basal macronarian. The juvenile tooth indicates that sauropods reproduced in high latitudes and possibly stayed there around the year. The Teete vertebrate assemblage comprises both endothermic, or presumably endothermic tetrapods (theropod dinosaurs, tritylodontids and mammals), and ectothermic tetrapods (salamanders, turtles, choristoderes and lizards), but no crocodyliforms. This suggests a temperate climate, with an annual mean temperature well above freezing level but below 14 degrees C.

AB - Isolated sauropod teeth from the Early Cretaceous Teete locality in Yakutia (Eastern Siberia, Russia) are the only evidence that sauropods lived in high latitudes (palaeolatitude estimate of N 62 degrees) in the Northern Hemisphere. The spatulate broad tooth crowns of adult individuals lack marginal denticles while these are present in a juvenile tooth. The teeth have overlapping facets and likely belong to a basal macronarian. The juvenile tooth indicates that sauropods reproduced in high latitudes and possibly stayed there around the year. The Teete vertebrate assemblage comprises both endothermic, or presumably endothermic tetrapods (theropod dinosaurs, tritylodontids and mammals), and ectothermic tetrapods (salamanders, turtles, choristoderes and lizards), but no crocodyliforms. This suggests a temperate climate, with an annual mean temperature well above freezing level but below 14 degrees C.

KW - Asia

KW - Cretaceous

KW - Dinosauria

KW - polar dinosaurs

KW - Sauropoda

KW - FAUNA

KW - SIBERIA

KW - POLAR DINOSAURS

KW - 1ST RECORD

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85076151272&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - http://www.mendeley.com/research/northernmost-sauropod-record-northern-hemisphere

U2 - 10.1111/let.12362

DO - 10.1111/let.12362

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85076151272

JO - Lethaia

JF - Lethaia

SN - 0024-1164

ER -

ID: 49947702