Martharaptor
Martharaptor | |
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Vertebrae (A-G), possible forelimb bones (H-I), a scapula (J-K), and pelvic bones (L-M) | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Clade: | Dinosauria |
Clade: | Saurischia |
Clade: | Theropoda |
Clade: | †Therizinosauria |
Superfamily: | † Therizinosauroidea
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Genus: | †Martharaptor Senter et al., 2012 |
Type species | |
†Martharaptor greenriverensis Senter et al., 2012
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Martharaptor is a
Discovery and naming
The
The specimen includes fragments of
Description
Forelimbs
A pair of fragmentary elongated bones preserved next to each other may represent the radius and ulna of the antebrachium. Hand and finger bones are more well-preserved, with strongly ginglymoidal (pulley-shaped) joint surfaces. The manual unguals (hand claws) are very distinctive. Their height is greater than their length, and they are strongly curved. One of the preserved unguals is larger than the others, and it may represent the claw of the first finger. Other unguals are as large as each other, indicating that the second and third fingers had claws of equal size. The deep unguals of similar shape differs from the condition in other early therizinosauroids, which have longer unguals which differ in shape between different fingers.[2]
Hindlimbs
Several bones of the left foot are preserved. The first metatarsal thins towards the ankle, similar to most theropods but unlike therizinosaurids, indicating that the first toe did not contact the ground. In conjunction with this, the claw of the first toe is smaller than those of the other toes. On the other hand, the toe claws are all deep and curved, as in other therizinosauroids. The fourth metatarsal is beveled (slightly slopes to the side) compared to the rest of the foot. This is intermediate between Falcarius, which has no slope, and therizinosaurids, which have a fourth metatarsal angled at 90 degrees to the rest of the foot. None of the metatarsals are ginglymoidal, but the toe bones are.[2]
Other bones
The only preserved bone of the pectoral girdle is the left scapula (shoulder blade). This bone has a hatchet-like shape, expanded near the shoulder as in other therizinosauroids which preserve a scapula and measures about 15 cm (150 mm) long. The pelvis (hip) preserves fragments of the pubis and part of the ischium, which is very flattened (from the side) near the hip socket.[2]
Three vertebral fragments are preserved. These include a strip of bone from the upper portion of a cervical (neck) vertebra, the centrum (main body) of a dorsal (back) vertebra, and the lower portion of a vertebra believed to be a distal caudal (i.e. from the tip of the tail). The cervical fragment shows that the
Classification
Phylogenetic analysis placed Martharaptor within Therizinosauroidea as the sister taxon to the Alxasaurus + Therizinosauridae group, although support for this placement is weak.[2] Nevertheless, Hartman et al. (2019) performed a phylogenetic analysis for the Therizinosauria corroborating the initial placement of Martharaptor.[3]
Left cladogram shows the probable placement of Martharaptor within Therizinosauroidea performed in the original description.[2]
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