Kemkemia

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Kemkemia
Temporal range: Cenomanian
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Archosauria
Clade: Pseudosuchia
Clade: Crocodylomorpha
Clade:
Solidocrania
Clade: Crocodyliformes
Genus: Kemkemia
Cau & Maganuco, 2009
Species:
K. auditorei
Binomial name
Kemkemia auditorei
Cau & Maganuco, 2009

Kemkemia is a

invertebrates. The fossil of Kemkemia dates from the Cenomanian
age.

History

The

Kem Kem Beds and the specific name honours Italian paleontological illustrator Marco Auditore
.

Description

The describers, because of the general

Neoceratosauria. In view of the limited remains, they cautiously assigned it to a more general Neotheropoda incertae sedis. However, the authors later discovered it to be a typical crocodyliform, rather than an unusual theropod.[2] Meanwhile, spinosaurids and crocodyliforms share a number of morphological convergences, and the Kemkemia holotype shows a combination of features between "Sigilmassasaurus" and crocodyliforms. Therefore, it is not determinable whether K. auditorei is a crocodyliform or a spinosaurid.[3]

Kemkemia was a

predator
with a body length of about 4–5 m (13–16 ft) and, given that the vertebra is not very robust, possibly lightly built. The species length could be extrapolated because the specimen is that of an adult.

Paleoecology

The fossil is one of the few probable known crocodyliform caudal vertebrae. It comes from the

Kem Kem Beds that have produced the fossils of very large predatory dinosaur genera: Spinosaurus, Carcharodontosaurus and Deltadromeus
.

References

  1. ^ Cau, Andrea; Maganuco, Simone (2009). "A new theropod dinosaur, represented by a single unusual caudal vertebra from the Kem Kem Beds (Cretaceous) of Morocco". Atti Soc. It. Sci. Nat. Museo Civ. Stor. Nat. Milano. 150 (II): 239–257.
  2. ^ Lio, G., Agnolin, F., Cau, A. and Maganuco, S. (2012). "Crocodyliform affinities for Kemkemia auditorei Cau and Maganuco, 2009, from the Late Cretaceous of Morocco." Atti della Società Italiana di Scienze Naturali e del Museo di Storia Naturale di Milano, 153 (I), s. 119–126.
  3. PMID 26966675
    .