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''Plateosaurus'' (probably meaning "broad
lizard Lizards are a widespread group of squamate reptiles, with over 7,000 species, ranging across all continents except Antarctica, as well as most oceanic island chains. The group is paraphyletic since it excludes the snakes and Amphisbaenia alt ...
", often mistranslated as "flat lizard") is a genus of
plateosaurid Plateosauridae is a family of plateosaurian sauropodomorphs from the Late Triassic of Europe, Greenland, Africa and Asia. Although several dinosaurs have been classified as plateosaurids over the years, the family Plateosauridae is now restricte ...
dinosaur that lived during the Late Triassic period, around 214 to 204 million years ago, in what is now Central and Northern Europe. ''Plateosaurus'' is a
basal Basal or basilar is a term meaning ''base'', ''bottom'', or ''minimum''. Science * Basal (anatomy), an anatomical term of location for features associated with the base of an organism or structure * Basal (medicine), a minimal level that is nec ...
(early) sauropodomorph dinosaur, a so-called "prosauropod". The type species is ''Plateosaurus trossingensis''; before 2019, that honor was given to ''Plateosaurus engelhardti'', but it was ruled as undiagnostic (i.e. indistinguishable from other dinosaurs) by the
ICZN The International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) is a widely accepted convention in zoology that rules the formal scientific naming of organisms treated as animals. It is also informally known as the ICZN Code, for its publisher, the I ...
. Currently, there are three valid species; in addition to ''P. trossingensis'', ''P. longiceps'' and ''P. gracilis'' are also known. However, others have been assigned in the past, and there is no broad consensus on the species taxonomy of plateosaurid dinosaurs. Similarly, there are a plethora of
synonyms A synonym is a word, morpheme, or phrase that means exactly or nearly the same as another word, morpheme, or phrase in a given language. For example, in the English language, the words ''begin'', ''start'', ''commence'', and ''initiate'' are all ...
(invalid duplicate names) at the genus level. Discovered in 1834 by Johann Friedrich Engelhardt and described three years later by Hermann von Meyer, ''Plateosaurus'' was the fifth named dinosaur genus that is still considered valid. Although it had been described before
Richard Owen Sir Richard Owen (20 July 1804 – 18 December 1892) was an English biologist, comparative anatomist and paleontologist. Owen is generally considered to have been an outstanding naturalist with a remarkable gift for interpreting fossils. Owe ...
formally named Dinosauria in 1842, it was not one of the three genera used by Owen to define the group, because at the time, it was poorly known and difficult to identify as a dinosaur. It is now among the dinosaurs best known to science: over 100 skeletons have been found, some of them nearly complete. The abundance of its fossils in
Swabia Swabia ; german: Schwaben , colloquially ''Schwabenland'' or ''Ländle''; archaic English also Suabia or Svebia is a cultural, historic and linguistic region in southwestern Germany. The name is ultimately derived from the medieval Duchy of ...
, Germany, has led to the nickname ''Schwäbischer Lindwurm'' (Swabian lindworm). ''Plateosaurus'' was a bipedal
herbivore A herbivore is an animal anatomically and physiologically adapted to eating plant material, for example foliage or marine algae, for the main component of its diet. As a result of their plant diet, herbivorous animals typically have mouthpart ...
with a small skull on a long, flexible neck, sharp but plump plant-crushing teeth, powerful hind limbs, short but muscular arms and grasping hands with large claws on three fingers, possibly used for defence and feeding. Unusually for a dinosaur, ''Plateosaurus'' showed strong developmental plasticity: instead of having a fairly uniform adult size, fully grown individuals were between long and weighed between . Commonly, the animals lived for at least 12 to 20 years, but the maximum life span is not known. Despite the great quantity and excellent quality of the fossil material, ''Plateosaurus'' was for a long time one of the most misunderstood dinosaurs. Some researchers proposed theories that were later shown to conflict with geological and palaeontological evidence, but have become the paradigm of public opinion. Since 1980 the taxonomy (relationships), taphonomy (how the animals became embedded and fossilised), biomechanics (how their skeletons worked), and palaeobiology (life circumstances) of ''Plateosaurus'' have been re-studied in detail, altering the interpretation of the animal's biology, posture and behaviour.


Discovery and history

In 1834, physician Johann Friedrich Engelhardt discovered some vertebrae and leg bones at
Heroldsberg Heroldsberg (East Franconian: ''Herldsbärch'') is a municipality in the district of Erlangen-Höchstadt, in Bavaria, Germany. It is located eleven kilometers north-east from the city of Nuremberg and 23 kilometers east from Erlangen and is the hea ...
near Nuremberg, Germany. Three years later German palaeontologist Hermann von Meyer designated them as the type specimen of a new genus, ''Plateosaurus''. Since then, remains of well over 100 individuals of ''Plateosaurus'' have been discovered at various locations throughout Europe. Material assigned to ''Plateosaurus'' has been found at over 50 localities in Germany (mainly along the
Neckar The Neckar () is a river in Germany, mainly flowing through the southwestern state of Baden-Württemberg, with a short section through Hesse. The Neckar is a major right tributary of the Rhine. Rising in the Schwarzwald-Baar-Kreis near Schwenn ...
and Pegnitz river valleys), Switzerland ( Frick) and France. Three localities are of special importance, because they yielded specimens in large numbers and of unusually good quality: near Halberstadt in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany; Trossingen in Baden-Württemberg, Germany; and Frick. Between the 1910s and 1930s, excavations in a
clay pit A clay pit is a quarry or mine for the extraction of clay, which is generally used for manufacturing pottery, bricks or Portland cement. Quarries where clay is mined to make bricks are sometimes called brick pits. A brickyard or brickworks is of ...
in Saxony-Anhalt revealed between 39 and 50 skeletons that belonged to ''Plateosaurus'', along with teeth and a small number of bones of the theropod ''
Liliensternus ''Liliensternus'' is an extinct genus of basal neotheropod dinosaur that lived approximately 210 million years ago during the latter part of the Triassic Period in what is now Germany. ''Liliensternus'' was a moderate-sized, bipedal, ground-dwel ...
'', and two skeletons and some fragments of the turtle ''
Proganochelys ''Proganochelys'' is an extinct, primitive stem-turtle that has been hypothesized to be the sister taxon to all other turtles creating a monophyletic group, the ''Casichelydia''. ''Proganochelys'' was named by Georg Baur in 1887 as the oldest tur ...
''. Some of the plateosaur material was assigned to ''P. longiceps'', a species described by palaeontologist
Otto Jaekel Otto Max Johannes Jaekel (21 February 1863 – 6 March 1929) was a German paleontologist and geologist. Biography Jaekel was born in Neusalz (Nowa Sól), Prussian Silesia, the son of a builder and the youngest of seven children. He studied at ...
in 1914. Most of the material found its way to the Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin, where much of it was destroyed during World War II. The Halberstadt quarry today is covered by a housing development. The second major German locality with ''Plateosaurus'' finds, a quarry in Trossingen in the Black Forest, was worked repeatedly in the 20th century. Between 1911 and 1932, excavations during six field seasons led by German palaeontologists Eberhard Fraas (1911–1912),
Friedrich von Huene Friedrich von Huene, born Friedrich Richard von Hoinigen, (March 22, 1875 – April 4, 1969) was a German paleontologist who renamed more dinosaurs in the early 20th century than anyone else in Europe. He also made key contributions about v ...
(1921–23), and finally Reinhold Seemann (1932) revealed a total of 35 complete or partially complete skeletons of ''Plateosaurus'', as well as fragmentary remains of approximately 70 more individuals. The large number of specimens from
Swabia Swabia ; german: Schwaben , colloquially ''Schwabenland'' or ''Ländle''; archaic English also Suabia or Svebia is a cultural, historic and linguistic region in southwestern Germany. The name is ultimately derived from the medieval Duchy of ...
had already caused German palaeontologist Friedrich August von Quenstedt to nickname the animal ''Schwäbischer Lindwurm'' (Swabian lindworm or Swabian
dragon A dragon is a reptilian legendary creature that appears in the folklore of many cultures worldwide. Beliefs about dragons vary considerably through regions, but dragons in western cultures since the High Middle Ages have often been depicted as ...
). Much of the Trossingen material was destroyed in 1944, when the Naturaliensammlung in Stuttgart (predecessor to the
State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart The State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart (german: Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart), abbreviated SMNS, is one of the two state of Baden-Württemberg's natural history museums. Together with the State Museum of Natural History ...
(SMNS)) burnt to the ground after an Allied bombing raid. Luckily, however, a 2011 study by SMNS curator Rainer Schoch found that, at least from the finds of Seemann's 1932 excavation, "the scientifically most valuable material is still available". The ''Plateosaurus'' skeletons in a clay pit of the Tonwerke Keller AG in Frick, Switzerland, were first noticed in 1976. While the bones are often significantly deformed by
taphonomic Taphonomy is the study of how organisms decay and become fossilized or preserved in the paleontological record. The term ''taphonomy'' (from Greek , 'burial' and , 'law') was introduced to paleontology in 1940 by Soviet scientist Ivan Efremov t ...
processes, Frick yields skeletons of ''P. trossingensis'' comparable in completeness and position to those of Trossingen. In 1997, workers of an
oil platform An oil platform (or oil rig, offshore platform, oil production platform, and similar terms) is a large structure with facilities to extract and process petroleum and natural gas that lie in rock formations beneath the seabed. Many oil platfor ...
of the
Snorre oil field Snorre is an oil and gas field in the Tampen area in the southern part of the Norwegian Sea. The sea depth in the area is . Snorre has been operational since August 1992. It was the first field developed by Saga Petroleum. A ''Plateosaurus'' ...
, located at the northern end of the North Sea within the
Lunde Formation The Lunde Formation is a Formation (geology), geologic formation in Norway. The formation was known to preserve fossils of ''Plateosaurus'' sp. in the Norwegian offshore (Snorre oil field, Snorre Field well 34/4-9S), dating back to the Rhaetian Pe ...
, were drilling through sandstone for oil exploration when they stumbled on a fossil they believed to be plant material. The drill core containing the fossil was extracted from below the seafloor. Martin Sander and Nicole Klein, palaeontologists of the University of Bonn, analysed the bone microstructure and concluded that the rock preserved fibrous bone tissue from a fragment of a limb bone belonging to ''Plateosaurus'', making it the first dinosaur found in Norway. Material referred to ''Plateosaurus'' has also been found in the
Fleming Fjord Formation The Fleming Fjord Formation, alternatively called the Fleming Fjord Group is an Upper Triassic geological formation in the northeastern coast of Jameson Land, Greenland. It consists of terrestrial sediments and is known for its fossil content. De ...
of East Greenland, but they were given the new genus name '' Issi'' in 2021. The type series of ''Plateosaurus engelhardti'' included "roughly 45 bone fragments", of which nearly half are lost. The remaining material is kept in the Institute for Palaeontology of the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany. From these bones, German palaeontologist Markus Moser in 2003 selected a partial
sacrum The sacrum (plural: ''sacra'' or ''sacrums''), in human anatomy, is a large, triangular bone at the base of the spine that forms by the fusing of the sacral vertebrae (S1S5) between ages 18 and 30. The sacrum situates at the upper, back part ...
(series of fused hip vertebrae) as a lectotype. The type locality is not known for certain, but Moser attempted to infer it from previous publications and the colour and preservation of the bones. He concluded that the material probably stems from the "Buchenbühl", roughly south of Heroldsberg. The type specimen of ''Plateosaurus gracilis'', an incomplete
postcranium Postcrania (postcranium, adjective: postcranial) in zoology and vertebrate paleontology is all or part of the skeleton apart from the skull. Frequently, fossil remains, e.g. of dinosaurs or other extinct tetrapods, consist of partial or isolated sk ...
, is kept at the
Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart The State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart (german: Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart), abbreviated SMNS, is one of the two state of Baden-Württemberg's natural history museums. Together with the State Museum of Natural History ...
, Germany, and the type locality is Heslach, a suburb of the same city. The type specimen of ''Plateosaurus trossingensis'' is SMNS 132000, stored in the same museum as ''P. gracilis''. Its type locality is Trossingen, which is located in Baden-Württemberg and the Löwenstein Formation. The type specimen of ''Plateosaurus longiceps'' is MB R.1937, which is stored in the Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin. Its type locality is Halberstadt, located in Saxony-Anhalt and the Knollenmergel Member of the
Trossingen Formation The Trossingen Formation, formerly the Knollenmergel, is a geological formation in Germany and Switzerland. It dates back to the late Norian-Rhaetian.Weishampel et al., 2004, pp.521–525 Vertebrate paleofauna See also * List of dinosaur- ...
.


Etymology

The etymology of the name ''Plateosaurus'' is not entirely clear. Moser pointed out that the original description contains no information, and various authors have offered differing interpretations. German geologist
Hanns Bruno Geinitz Hanns Bruno Geinitz (16 October 1814 – 28 January 1900) was a German geologist, born at Altenburg, the capital of Saxe-Altenburg. He was educated at the universities of Berlin and Jena, and gained the foundations of his geological knowledge ...
in 1846 gave
πλᾰτῠ́ς
breit)" nglish: broad with von Meyer's Latin spelling ''Plateosaurus'' evidently derived from the stem of πλᾰτέος (''plateos''), the genitive case of the masculine adjective ''platys'' in Ancient Greek. In the same year, Agassiz offered Ancient Greek '' πλατη'' (''platê'' – "paddle", "rudder"; Agassiz translates this as Latin ''pala'' = "spade") and
σαυρος
' (''sauros'' – "lizard"). Agassiz consequently renamed the genus ''Platysaurus'', probably from Greek ''πλατυς'' (''platys'' – "broad, flat, broad-shouldered"), creating an invalid junior synonym. Later authors often referred to this derivation, and the secondary meaning "flat" of ''πλατυς'', so that ''Plateosaurus'' is often translated as "flat lizard". Often, claims were made that ''πλατυς'' is supposed to have been intended as a reference to flat bones, for example the laterally flattened teeth of ''Plateosaurus'', but the teeth and other flat bones such as the pubic bones and some skull elements were unknown at the time of description. In 1855, von Meyer published a detailed description of ''Plateosaurus'' with illustrations, but again gave no details on the etymology. He repeatedly referred to its gigantic size ("Riesensaurus" = giant lizard) and massive limbs ("schwerfüssig"), comparing ''Plateosaurus'' to large modern land mammals, but did not describe any important features that fit the terms "flat" or "shaped like an oar." In addition to his formal scientific descriptions, von Meyer also gave a public lecture about fossil reptiles in 1851 that included a short mention of ''Plateosaurus''. That talk and a later one on fossil mammals were turned into a general audience book published in 1852, entitled ''Über die Reptilien und Säugethiere der verschiedenen Zeiten der Erde'' 'On the Reptiles and Mammals from the Different Time Periods of the Earth'' In the German text (page 44), von Meyer briefly described ''Plateosaurus'' and mentioned that it had "breite, starke Gliedmaassenknochen," which translates as "broad, strong limb bones." Because his original description of ''Plateosaurus'' in 1837 stressed the similarity of its large limb bones to those of ''Megalosaurus'' and ''Iguanodon'', a meaning "broad lizard" for the name ''Plateosaurus'' to refer in particular to its robust limb bones would seem plausible.


Valid species

The taxonomic history of ''Plateosaurus'' is "long and confusing", a "chaotic tangle of names". As of 2019, only three species are universally accepted as valid: the type species ''P. trossingensis, P. longiceps, and'' ''P. gracilis'', previously assigned to its own genus ''Sellosaurus''. Moser performed the most extensive and detailed investigation of all plateosaurid material from Germany and Switzerland, concluding that all ''Plateosaurus'' and most other prosauropod material from the
Keuper The Keuper is a lithostratigraphic unit (a sequence of rock strata) in the subsurface of large parts of west and central Europe. The Keuper consists of dolomite, shales or claystones and evaporites that were deposited during the Middle and Late ...
stems from the same species as the type material of ''Plateosaurus engelhardti''. However, this is problematic due to the undiagnostic state of the lectotype. Moser considered ''Sellosaurus'' to be the same genus as ''Plateosaurus'', but did not discuss whether ''S. gracilis'' and ''P. engelhardti'' belong to the same species. Palaeontologist Adam Yates of the University of the Witwatersrand cast further doubt on the generic separation. He included the type material of ''Sellosaurus gracilis'' in ''Plateosaurus'' as ''P. gracilis'' and reintroduced the old name '' Efraasia'' for some material that had been assigned to ''Sellosaurus''. In 1926, von Huene had already concluded the two genera were the same. Yates has cautioned that ''P. gracilis'' may be a metataxon, which means that there is neither evidence that the material assigned to it is monophyletic (belongs to one species), nor that it is
paraphyletic In taxonomy (general), taxonomy, a group is paraphyletic if it consists of the group's most recent common ancestor, last common ancestor and most of its descendants, excluding a few Monophyly, monophyletic subgroups. The group is said to be pa ...
(belongs to several species). This is the case because the holotype of ''P. (Sellosaurus) gracilis'' has no skull, and the other specimens consist of skulls and material that overlaps too little with the holotype to make it certain that it belongs to the same taxon. It is therefore possible that the known material contains more species belonging to ''Plateosaurus''. Some scientists regard other species as valid as well, for example ''P. erlenbergensis'' and ''P. engelhardti''. These claims are problematic since both ''P. erlenbergensis'' and ''P. engelhardti'' have undiagnostic type specimens. All named species of ''Plateosaurus'' except the type species, ''P. gracilis,'' or ''P. longiceps'' have turned out to be junior synonyms of the type species or invalid names. Von Huene practically erected a new species and sometimes a new genus for each relatively complete find from Trossingen (three species of ''Pachysaurus'' and seven of ''Plateosaurus'') and Halberstadt (one species of ''Gresslyosaurus'' and eight of ''Plateosaurus''). Later, he merged several of these species, but remained convinced that more than one genus and more than one species of ''Plateosaurus'' was present in both localities. Jaekel also believed that the Halberstadt material included several plateosaurid dinosaurs, as well as non-plateosaurid prosauropods. Systematic research by Galton drastically reduced the number of genera and species. Galton synonymised all cranial material, and described differences between the syntypes of ''P. engelhardti'' and the Trossingen material, which he referred to ''P. longiceps''. Galton recognised ''P. trossingensis'' (''P. fraasianus'' and ''P. integer'' are junior objective synonyms) to be identical to ''P. longiceps''. Markus Moser, however, showed that ''P. longiceps'' is itself a junior synonym of ''P. engelhardti''. Furthermore, a variety of species in other genera were created for material belonging to ''P. engelhardti'', including ''Dimodosaurus poligniensis'', ''Gresslyosaurus robustus'', ''Gresslyosaurus torgeri'', ''Pachysaurus ajax'', ''Pachysaurus giganteus'', ''Pachysaurus magnus'' and ''Pachysaurus wetzelianus''. ''G. ingens'' has been considered separate from ''Plateosaurus'', pending a revision of the material. The skull of AMNH FARB 6810, the best-preserved skull of ''Plateosaurus'' that has been taken apart during preparation and is thus available as separate bones, was described anew in 2011. The authors of that publication, palaeontologists Albert Prieto-Márquez and Mark A. Norell, refer the skull to ''P. erlenbergensis'', a species erected in 1905 by Friedrich von Huene and regarded as a synonym of ''P. engelhardti'' by Markus Moser. If the ''P. erlenbergensis'' holotype is diagnostic (i.e., has enough characters to be distinct from other material), it is the correct name for the material assigned to ''P. longiceps'' Jaekel, 1913. Aside from fossils clearly belonging to ''Plateosaurus'', there is much prosauropod material from the German
Knollenmergel The Trossingen Formation, formerly the Knollenmergel, is a geological formation in Germany and Switzerland. It dates back to the late Norian-Rhaetian.Weishampel et al., 2004, pp.521–525 Vertebrate paleofauna See also * List of dinosaur- ...
in museum collections, most of it labeled as ''Plateosaurus'', that does not belong to the type species and possibly not to ''Plateosaurus'' at all. Some of this material is not diagnostic; other material has been recognised to be different, but was never sufficiently described.


Description

''Plateosaurus'' had the typical body shape of a herbivorous bipedal dinosaur: a small skull, a long and flexible neck composed of 10
cervical vertebrae In tetrapods, cervical vertebrae (singular: vertebra) are the vertebrae of the neck, immediately below the skull. Truncal vertebrae (divided into thoracic and lumbar vertebrae in mammals) lie caudal (toward the tail) of cervical vertebrae. In ...
, a stocky body, and a long, mobile tail composed of at least 40
caudal vertebrae The spinal column, a defining synapomorphy shared by nearly all vertebrates,Hagfish are believed to have secondarily lost their spinal column is a moderately flexible series of vertebrae (singular vertebra), each constituting a characteristic ...
. The arms of ''Plateosaurus'' were very short, even compared to most other "prosauropods". However, they were strongly built, with hands adapted for powerful grasping. The
shoulder girdle The shoulder girdle or pectoral girdle is the set of bones in the appendicular skeleton which connects to the arm on each side. In humans it consists of the clavicle and scapula; in those species with three bones in the shoulder, it consists of t ...
was narrow (often misaligned in skeletal mounts and drawings), with the clavicles (collar bones) touching at the body's midline, as in other basal sauropodomorphs. The hind limbs were held under the body, with slightly flexed knees and ankles, and the foot was digitigrade, meaning the animal walked on its toes. The proportionally long lower leg and metatarsus show that ''Plateosaurus'' could run quickly on its hind limbs. The tail of ''Plateosaurus'' was typically dinosaurian, muscular and with high mobility. The skull of ''Plateosaurus'' is small and narrow, rectangular in side view, and nearly three times as long as it is high. There is an almost rectangular lateral temporal foramen at the back. The large, round Orbit (anatomy), orbit (eye socket), the sub-triangular antorbital fenestra and the oval naris (nostril) are of almost equal size. The jaws carried many small, leaf-shaped, socketed teeth: 5 to 6 per premaxilla, 24 to 30 per maxilla, and 21 to 28 per mandible, dentary (lower jaw). The thick, leaf-shaped, bluntly serrated tooth crowns were suitable for crushing plant material. The low position of the jaw joint gave the chewing muscles great leverage, so that ''Plateosaurus'' could deliver a powerful bite. These features suggest that it fed primarily to exclusively on plants. Its eyes were directed to the sides, rather than the front, providing all-round vision to watch for predators. Some fossil skeletons have preserved sclerotic rings (rings of bone plates that protect the eye). The ribs were connected to the dorsal (trunk) vertebrae with two joints, acting together as a simple hinge joint, which has allowed researchers to reconstruct the inhaled and exhaled positions of the ribcage. The difference in volume between these two positions defines the air exchange volume (the amount of air moved with each breath), determined to be approximately 20 L for a ''P. engelhardti'' individual estimated to have weighed 690 kg, or 29 mL/kg bodyweight. This is a typical value for birds, but not for mammals, and indicates that ''Plateosaurus'' probably had an Bird lung, avian-style flow-through lung, although indicators for Skeletal pneumaticity, postcranial pneumaticity (air sacs of the lung invading the bones to reduce weight) can be found on the bones of only a few individuals, and were only recognised in 2010. Combined with evidence from bone histology this indicates that ''Plateosaurus'' was endothermic. The type species of ''Plateosaurus'' is ''P. trossingensis''. Adults of this species reached in length, and ranged in mass from . The geologically older species, ''P. gracilis'' (formerly named ''Sellosaurus gracilis''), was somewhat smaller, with a total length of .


Classification

''Plateosaurus'' is a member of a group of early
herbivore A herbivore is an animal anatomically and physiologically adapted to eating plant material, for example foliage or marine algae, for the main component of its diet. As a result of their plant diet, herbivorous animals typically have mouthpart ...
s known as "Plateosauridae, prosauropods". The group is not a Monophyly, monophyletic group (thus given in quotation marks), and most researchers prefer the term ''basal Sauropodomorpha, sauropodomorph''. ''Plateosaurus'' was the first "prosauropod" to be described, and gives its name to the family Plateosauridae as the type genus. Initially, when the genus was poorly known, it was only included in Sauria, being some kind of reptile, but not in any more narrowly defined taxon. In 1845, von Meyer created the group Dinosaur, Pachypodes (a defunct junior Synonym (taxonomy), synonym of Dinosauria) to include ''Plateosaurus'', ''Iguanodon'', ''Megalosaurus'' and ''Hylaeosaurus''. Plateosauridae was proposed by Othniel Charles Marsh in 1895 within Theropoda. Later it was moved to "Plateosauridae, Prosauropoda" by von Huene, a placement that was accepted by most authors. Before the advent of cladistics in paleontology during the 1980s, with its emphasis on monophyly, monophyletic groups (clades), Plateosauridae was defined loosely, as large, broad-footed, broad-handed forms with relatively heavy skulls, unlike the smaller "Anchisaurus, anchisaurids" and sauropod-like "melanorosauridae, melanorosaurids". Reevaluation of "prosauropods" in light of the new methods of analysis led to the reduction of Plateosauridae. For many years the clade only included ''Plateosaurus'' and various junior synonyms, but later two more genera were considered to belong to it: ''Sellosaurus'' and possibly ''Unaysaurus''. Of these, ''Sellosaurus'' is probably another junior synonym of ''Plateosaurus''. Basal sauropodomorph phylogenetics, phylogeny simplified after Yates, 2007. This is only one of many proposed cladograms for basal sauropodomorphs. Some researchers do not agree that plateosaurs were the direct ancestors of sauropods.


Palaeobiology


Posture and gait

Practically every imaginable posture has been suggested for ''Plateosaurus'' in the scientific literature at some point. Von Huene assumed digitigrade bipedalism, bipedality with erect hind limbs for the animals he excavated at Trossingen, with the backbone held at a steep angle (at least during rapid locomotion). In contrast, Jaekel, the main investigator of the Halberstadt material, initially concluded that the animals walked quadrupedalism, quadrupedally, like lizards, with a sprawling limb position, plantigrade feet, and Undulatory locomotion, laterally undulating the body. Only a year later, Jaekel instead favoured a clumsy, kangaroo-like hopping, a change of heart for which he was mocked by German zoology, zoologist Gustav Tornier, who interpreted the shape of the articulation surfaces in the hip and shoulder as typically reptilian. Fraas, the first excavator of the Trossingen lagerstätte, also favoured a reptilian posture. Müller-Stoll listed a number of characters required for an erect limb posture that ''Plateosaurus'' supposedly lacked, concluding that the lizard-like reconstructions were correct. However, most of these adaptations are actually present in ''Plateosaurus''. From 1980 on, a better understanding of dinosaur biomechanics, and studies by palaeontologists Andreas Christian and Holger Preuschoft on the resistance to bending of the back of ''Plateosaurus'', led to widespread acceptance of an erect, digitigrade limb posture and a roughly horizontal position of the back. Many researchers were of the opinion that ''Plateosaurus'' could use both quadrupedal gaits (for slow speeds) and bipedal gaits (for rapid locomotion), and Peter Wellnhofer, Wellnhofer insisted that the tail curved strongly downward, making a bipedal posture impossible. However, Moser showed that the tail was in fact straight. The bipedal-quadrupedal consensus was changed by a detailed study of the forelimbs of ''Plateosaurus'' by Matthew Bonnan, Bonnan and Senter (2007), which clearly showed that ''Plateosaurus'' was incapable of Anatomical terms of motion, pronating its hands. The pronated position in some museum mounts had been achieved by exchanging the position of Radius (bone), radius and ulna in the elbow. The lack of forelimb pronation meant that ''Plateosaurus'' was an obligate (i.e. unable to walk in any other way) biped. Further indicators for a purely bipedal mode of locomotion are the great difference in limb length (the hind limb is roughly twice as long as the forelimb), the very limited motion range of the forelimb, and the fact that the centre of mass rests squarely over the hind limbs. ''Plateosaurus'' shows a number of cursorial adaptations, including an erect hind limb posture, a relatively long lower leg, an elongated Metatarsal bones, metatarsus and a digitigrade foot posture. However, in contrast to mammalian cursors, the Torque, moment arms of the limb Extension (kinesiology), extending muscles are short, especially in the ankle, where a distinct, moment arm-increasing tuber on the calcaneus, calcaneum is missing. This means that in contrast to running mammals, ''Plateosaurus'' probably did not use gaits with aerial, unsupported phases. Instead, ''Plateosaurus'' must have increased speed by using higher stride frequencies, created by rapid and powerful limb retraction. Reliance on Limb (anatomy), limb Anatomical_terms_of_motion#Other_2, retraction instead of extension is typical for non-avian dinosaurs.


Feeding and diet

Important cranial characteristics (such as jaw articulation) of most "prosauropods" are closer to those of herbivorous reptiles than those of carnivorous ones, and the shape of the tooth Crown (tooth), crown is similar to that of modern herbivorous or omnivorous iguanas. The maximum width of the crown was greater than that of the root for the teeth of most "prosauropods", including ''Plateosaurus''; this results in a cutting edge similar to those of extant herbivorous or omnivorous reptiles. Paul Barrett proposed that prosauropods supplemented their mostly herbivorous diets with small prey or carrion, thus making them omnivores. So far, no fossil of ''Plateosaurus'' has been found with gastroliths (gizzard stones) in the stomach area. The old, widely cited idea that all large dinosaurs, implicitly also ''Plateosaurus'', swallowed gastroliths to digest food because of their relatively limited ability to deal with food orally has been refuted by a study on gastrolith abundance, weight, and surface structure in fossils compared to alligators and ostriches by Oliver Wings. The use of gastroliths for digestion seems to have developed on the line from basal theropods to birds, with a parallel development in ''Psittacosaurus''.


Life history and metabolism

Similar to all non-avian dinosaurs studied to date, ''Plateosaurus'' grew in a pattern that is unlike that of both Extant taxon, extant mammals and birds. In the closely related sauropods with their typical physiology of dinosaurs, dinosaurian physiology, growth was initially rapid, continuing somewhat more slowly well beyond sexual maturity, but was determinate, i.e. the animals stopped growing at a maximum size. Mammals grow rapidly, but sexual maturity falls typically at the end of the rapid growth phase. In both groups, the final size is relatively constant, with humans atypically variable. Extant reptiles show a sauropod-like growth pattern, initially rapid, then slowing after sexual maturity, and almost, but not fully, stopping in old age. However, their initial growth rate is much lower than in mammals, birds and dinosaurs. The reptilian growth rate is also very variable, so that individuals of the same age may have very different sizes, and final size also varies significantly. In extant animals, this growth pattern is linked to behavioural thermoregulation and a low metabolism, metabolic rate (i.e. ectothermy), and is called "developmental plasticity". (Note that is not the same as neural developmental plasticity). ''Plateosaurus'' followed a trajectory similar to sauropods, but with a varied growth rate and final size as seen in extant reptiles, probably in response to environmental factors such as food availability. Some individuals were fully grown at only 4.8 metres' (16 ft) total length, while others reached . However, the bone microstructure indicates rapid growth, as in sauropods and extant mammals, which suggests warm-blooded, endothermy. ''Plateosaurus'' apparently represents an early stage in the development of endothermy, in which endothermy was decoupled from developmental plasticity. This hypothesis is based on a detailed study of ''Plateosaurus'' long-bone histology conducted by Martin Sander and Nicole Klein of the University of Bonn. A further indication for endothermy is the avian-style lung of ''Plateosaurus''. Long-bone histology also allows estimating the age a specific individual reached. Sander and Klein found that some individuals were fully grown at 12 years of age, others were still slowly growing at 20 years, and one individual was still growing rapidly at 18 years. The oldest individual found was 27 years and still growing; most individuals were between 12 and 20 years old. However, some may well have lived much longer, because the fossils from Frick and Trossingen are all animals that died in accidents, and not from old age. Due to the absence of individuals smaller than long, it is not possible to deduce a complete ontogeny, ontogenetic series for ''Plateosaurus'' or determine the growth rate of animals less than 10 years of age. Comparisons between the sclerotic ring, scleral rings and estimated orbit size of ''Plateosaurus'' and modern birds and reptiles suggest that it may have been Cathemerality, cathemeral, active throughout the day and night, possibly avoiding the midday heat.


Palaeoecology

''Plateosaurus gracilis'', the older species, is found in the Löwenstein Formation (Lower Norian). ''P. trossingensis'' stems from the upper Löwenstein Formation (Upper Norian), and ''P. longiceps'' the
Trossingen Formation The Trossingen Formation, formerly the Knollenmergel, is a geological formation in Germany and Switzerland. It dates back to the late Norian-Rhaetian.Weishampel et al., 2004, pp.521–525 Vertebrate paleofauna See also * List of dinosaur- ...
(Rhaetian), and equivalently aged rock units. ''Plateosaurus'' thus lived probably from approximately 214 to 204 million years ago.


Taphonomy

The taphonomy (burial and fossilisation process) of the three main ''Plateosaurus'' sites—Trossingen, Halberstadt and Frick—is unusual in several ways. All three sites are nearly monospecific assemblages, meaning that they contain practically only one species, which requires very special circumstances. However, shed teeth of theropoda, theropods have been found at all three sites, as well as remains of the early turtle ''Proganochelys''. Additionally, a partial "prosauropod" skeleton was found in Halberstadt that does not belong to ''Plateosaurus'', but is preserved in a similar position. All sites yielded almost complete and partial skeletons of ''Plateosaurus'', as well as isolated bones. The partial skeletons tend to include the hind limbs and hips, while parts of the anterior body and neck are rarely found in isolation. The animals were all adults or subadults (nearly adult individuals); no juveniles or hatchlings are known. Complete skeletons and large skeleton parts that include the hind limbs all rest dorsal (top) side up, as do the turtles. Also, they are mostly well-articulated, and the hind limbs are three-dimensionally preserved in a zigzag posture, with the feet often much deeper in the sediment than the hips.


Earlier interpretations

In the first published discussion of the Trossingen ''Plateosaurus'' finds, Fraas suggested that only miring in mud allowed the preservation of the single complete skeleton then known. Similarly, Jaekel interpreted the Halberstadt finds as animals that waded too deep into swamps, became mired and drowned. He interpreted partial remains as having been transported into the deposit by water, and strongly refuted a catastrophic accumulation. In contrast, von Huene interpreted the sediment as Aeolian processes, aeolian deposits, with the weakest animals, mostly subadults, succumbing to the harsh conditions in the desert and sinking into the mud of Ephemerality, ephemeral water holes. He argued that the completeness of many finds indicated that transport did not happen, and saw partial individuals and isolated bones as results of weathering and trampling. Seemann developed a different scenario, in which ''Plateosaurus'' herds congregated on large water holes, and some herd members got pushed in. Light animals managed to get free, while heavy individuals got stuck and died. A different school of thought developed almost half a century later, with palaeontologist David B. Weishampel, David Weishampel suggesting that the skeletons from the lower layers stemmed from a herd that died catastrophically in a mudflow, while those in the upper layers accumulated over time. Weishampel explained the curious monospecific assemblage by theorising that ''Plateosaurus'' were common during this period. This theory was erroneously attributed to Seemann in a popular account of the plateosaurs in the collection of the Institute and Museum for Geology and Palaeontology, University of Tübingen, and has since become the standard explanation on most internet sites and in popular books on dinosaurs. Rieber proposed a more elaborate scenario, which included the animals dying of thirst or starvation, and being concentrated by mudflows.


Mud-miring trap

A detailed re-assessment of the taphonomy by palaeontologist Martin Sander of the University of Bonn, Germany, found that the mud-miring hypothesis first suggested by Fraas is true: animals above a certain body weight sank into the mud, which was further liquefied by their attempts to free themselves. Sander's scenario, similar to that proposed for the famous Rancho La Brea Tar Pits, is the only one explaining all taphonomic data. The degree of completeness of the carcasses was not influenced by transport, which is obvious from the lack of indications for transport before burial, but rather by how much the dead animals were scavenged. Juveniles of ''Plateosaurus'' and other taxa of herbivores were too light to sink into the mud or managed to extract themselves, and were thus not preserved. Similarly, scavenging theropoda, theropods were not trapped due to their lower body weights, combined with proportionally larger feet. There is no indication of herding, or of catastrophic burial of such a herd, or catastrophic accumulation of animals that previously died isolated elsewhere.


Notes


References


External links

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3D skull models of ''Plateosaurus''
at Sketchfab
3D walking skeletal model of ''Plateosaurus''
at Sketchfab {{featured article Plateosauridae Clawed herbivores Late Triassic genus first appearances Late Triassic genus extinctions Late Triassic dinosaurs of Europe Fossils of Germany Fossils of Switzerland Fossils of Norway Fossil taxa described in 1837 Taxa named by Christian Erich Hermann von Meyer