Timeline of ichthyosaur research

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Artist's restoration of a school of Grendelius

This timeline of ichthyosaur research is a chronological listing of events in the

fishes;[1] their true nature was not recognized until the 19th century. In 1811, a boy named Joseph Anning discovered the first ichthyosaur fossils that would come to be scientifically recognized as such.[2] His sister Mary would later find the rest of its skeleton and would go on to become a respected fossil collector and paleontologist in her own right.[3]

Early researchers recognized ichthyosaurs as marine reptiles, but major aspects of their anatomy and behavior needed to be resolved. They were frequently portrayed as leaving the water to bask on rocks and with straight tails.

Ichthyosaur discoveries continued to be made into the

Other notable late 20th century advances in ichthyosaur research include the recognition of a new genus of ichthyosaur called

mosasaurs which had evolved around the time.[10]

17th century

1699

  • fishes. 120 copies of the book were produced.[1]

19th century

1810s

Illustration of the ichthyosaur skull discovered by Joseph Anning. Everard Home, 1814
The torso found by Mary Anning

1811

  • Joseph Anning discovered the first scientifically recognized ichthyosaur remains.[2]

1812

  • Mary Anning found the rest of the original ichthyosaur skeleton discovered by her brother Joseph.[2]

1814

  • An anatomist with the
    crocodiles".[2]

1818

1819

  • Everard Home changed his mind about the relationships of
    lizards.[2] He tried to rename it Proteosaurus after the salamander genus Proteus, but his original name had priority and is still considered official.[11]

1820s

dolphins
.

1822

  • Conybeare described Ichthyosaurus communis and
    Temnodontosaurus platyodon
    .

1823

  • Mary Anning or a member of her family discovered a complete Ichthyosaurus skeleton in Lyme Regis. The find aroused widespread curiosity about ancient life throughout Britain.[2]

1824

  • The
    dolphins. Young speculated that ichthyosaurs might still be discovered alive as more of the world's seas and oceans are explored.[12]

1830s

Henry de la Beche
, 1830

1830

  • Henry de la Beche illustrated a work titled "Duria Antiquior", meaning "Ancient Dorset" for fossil hunter Mary Anning. This work, which prominently features plesiosaurs, has been regarded as the first attempt to accurately reconstruct the Mesozoic world through an artistic medium.[13]

1834

  • Thomas W. Hawkins published a book titled Memoirs of Ichthyosauri and Plesiosauri. He sold it in subscription format for L2.10, an exorbitantly high price for the period.[14] The book included illustrations by landscape painter John Samuelson Templeton, although many of these inaccurately portray ichthyosaurs with straight tails and leaving the water to bask on rocks.[4]

1840s

1840

  • Owen described the new species "
    Ichthyosaurus" acutirostris
    .

1843

  • Theodori described the new species that would later become known as
    Temnodontosaurus trigonodon
    .

1844

  • Bronn described the species that would later become known as
    Suevoleviathan integer
    .

1846

  • Sir Richard Owen, Pearce concluded that the specimen was a female killed and preserved in the act of giving birth.[6]

1850s

Fossil of Ichthyosaurus (now Eurhinosaurus) longirostris

1851

1852

  • Quenstedt described the species that would later become known as
    Contectopalatus atavus
    .

1853

1854

  • Sir Richard Owen inaccurately reconstructed Ichthyosaurus as straight-tailed and able to bask on rocks for an outdoor exhibit at Sydenham.[5]

1858

  • Quenstedt described the species that would later come to be known as
    Stenopterygius triscissus
    .

1860s

Two fossil Stenopterygius from Holzmaden

1860

1866

1867

  • M'Coy described the species that would later come to be known as
    Platypterygius australis
    .

1868

  • Leidy described the genus
    Cymbospondylus petrinus
    .

1870s

1871

  • Hulke described the species that would later become known as
    Nannopterygius enthekiodon
    .

1874

  • Seeley described the new genus and species
    Ophthalmosaurus icenicus
    .

1876

1879

  • Marsh described the species that would one day come to be known as
    Ophthalmosaurus natans
    .

1880s

Artist's restoration of Mixosaurus

1880

  • Harry Govier Seeley published an argument in favor of live birth in ichthyosaurs. Seeley noted that many ichthyosaur specimens from Britain and Germany contained miniature ichthyosaur skeletons inside them. While some researchers interpreted these remains as fossil stomach contents, Seeley observed that the smaller skeletons tend to be located too near the rear of the animal to be stomach contents. Instead, he interpreted the small skeletons as fetuses and the larger ones as pregnant females.[19]

1881

1886

  • Bassani described the species that would later come to be known as
    Mixosaurus cornalianus
    .

1887

1888

1889

1890s

1895

  • Merriam described the new genus and species
    Shastasaurus pacificus
    .

20th century

1900s

Artist's restoration of Omphalosaurus

1902

1903

  • J. C. Merriam described the new genus
    Toretocnemus zitteli
    .

1904

  • Boulenger described the species that would later become known as
    Brachypterygius extremus
    .
  • Jaekel described the new genus Stenopterygius.

1906

  • J. C. Merriam discovered the unusual remains of an animal with short jaws and button-shaped teeth
    rhynchosaurs but it would actually come to be recognized as ichthyosaurian and described as the genus Omphalosaurus.[25]

1908

1909

1910s

Mounted skeleton of Ophthalmosaurus

1910

1916

1920s

1922

1925

  • von Huene described a new species of Shastasaurus.[30]

1926

  • von Huene erected the new genus Suevoleviathan for the species "Leptopterygius" disinteger.
Skeletal reconstruction of the Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park ichthyosaur

1927

1928

1929

  • Wiman described the new genus and species
    Grippia longirostris
    .

1930s

1931

1934

  • The most complete known ichthyosaur specimen from Australia, a Platypterygius was discovered in Queensland. Despite not being fully grown it was 18 feet in length.[17]
  • Kuhn described the genus Californosaurus.

1939

  • Nace described the genus that would one day be known as
    Platypterygius americanus
    .

1940s

1946

  • Kuhn described the species
    Platypterygius hercynicus
    .

1948

  • Alfred Romer noted that Jurassic ichthyosaurs were so highly specialized for aquatic life that their anatomy exhibited no sign of descent from any known terrestrial reptile group.[31]

1950s

A Stenopterygius skeleton from Holzmaden

1951

  • Willy Ley, a German zoologist, observed that more than two hundred ichthyosaur specimens were being recovered from Holzmaden annually.[18]

1954

  • Charles Camp and Samuel Welles of Berkeley lead the excavation of the gigantic ichthyosaur fossils discovered by Simeon Muller in the 20s. They estimated their body length to be 50 feet, which is roughly as large as a modern humpback whale.[7]

1956

  • Whitear reported brown pigmentation preserved in an ichthyosaur fossil.[32]
Artist's restoration of Shonisaurus

1957

  • Camp's ichthyosaur excavation in Nevada ceased.[33]
  • Not far from Stowbridge in Norfolk, workers serendipitously discovered a large partial ichthyosaur skeleton while digging a drainage channel. The specimen was later thought to belong to the genus Ophthalmosaurus.[29]

1960s

Artist's restoration of Temnodontosaurus

1963

  • Camp resumed excavating the gigantic ichthyosaurs in Nevada.[33]

1965

  • Colbert hypothesized that ichthyosaurs were descended from cotylosaurs.[31]
  • Camp's ichthyosaur excavation in Nevada ended, with 35–40 partial ichthyosaur skeletons unearthed.[33]

1968

1970s

1972

  • McGowan argued that the narrow-finned longipinnate and the broad-finned latipinnate ichthyosaurs could be distinguished based on features of their skulls.[35]
  • Young and Dong described the new genera and species
    Himalayasaurus tibetensis
    .

1973

  • McGowan described the cranial anatomy of Ichthyosaurus. He observed that it had a very large
    corpus striatum implied that it had a sophisticated repertoire of instinctive behaviors.[15] He speculated that social and parental behavior may have been among them.[36] By contrast, the lagena of Ichthyosaurus was small, suggesting that ichthyosaurs had weak sense of hearing.[37]
Shonisaurus popularis
(green) with a human and S. sikanniensis to scale

1974

1975

  • Charles Camp died before he could finish his monograph on the
    Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park ichthyosaurs.[38]

1976

  • Joseph Gregory, a friend of Charles Camp, published some of Camp's research on the ichthyosaurs of Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park.[38]
  • The new genus and species
    Shonisaurus popularis
    was described.
  • McGowan observed that the eyes of the supposed Ophthalmosaurus discovered in Norfolk during 1950s were too small for the animal to be referred to that genus and reclassified it in a new one:
    Brachypterygius mordax
    .

1978

  • Shikama, Kamei and Murata described the new genus and species
    Utatsusaurus hataii
    .

1979

  • McGowan observed that more ichthyosaur remains have been found in the
    whales and dolphins. McGowan attributed the narrow ranges of most known ichthyosaur species to an artifact of the fossil record, since paleontologists can only recover fossils from accessible exposures of sedimentary rocks formed in settings conducive to fossilization, which may not correspond to the complete life range of a given species.[39] He also rejected his own previous conclusion that latipinnate and longipinnate ichthyosaurs could be distinguished based on features of the skull and expressed doubt about the validity of the latipinnate-longipinnate dichotomy altogether.[35]

1980s

Shonisaurus fossils on exhibit at Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park

1980

  • Joseph Gregory published the rest of his late friend Charles Camp's research on the ichthyosaurs of Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park. This publication contained a reconstruction of Shonisaurus portraying as a long-skulled long-finned animal with an unusually deep "pot belly".[38]

1983

  • Angela Kirton reported the presence of teeth in skulls attributable to Ophthalmosaurus from England. The toothlessness of many adult skulls suggest that either Ophthalmosaurus lost its teeth as it aged or the teeth were only loosely attached and prone to falling out after death.[27]

1984

  • Wade observed that the longest digit in the flipper of Platypterygius was made up of a series of 30 bones.[35]
  • Fossils of an unusual ichthyosaur whose upper jaw was much longer than its lower jaw were found.[40]

1985

Skeletal mount of Ophthalmosaurus

1986

  • Christopher McGowan began leading a series of expeditions to Williston Lake, British Columbia, culminating in the discovery of the most complete known skeleton of Shastasaurus, which also served as the type specimen of a new species that would later be described in 1994.[43]
Artist's restoration of Excalibosaurus

1987

  • Mazin described the new species
    Omphalosaurus nettarhynchus
    .

1988

  • Massare and Callaway described a pregnant Mixosaurus specimen discovered in the Alps near the border between Switzerland and Italy. The specimen represented the oldest known evidence for live birth in ichthyosaurs.[45]
  • Three specimens attributable to a new Triassic ichthyosaur were discovered near
    Phattalung, Thailand by a man named Chongpan Chonglakmani.[46]

1989

Skeleton of Mixosaurus
  • In Dorset, England, a new specimen of Grendelius was discovered. However, when Christoper McGowan studied this new specimen he realized that while distinct from Ophthalmosaurus, Grendelius was apparently the same as the previously named genus Brachypterygius and the names were synonymized.[29]
  • McGowan observed that many Leptonectes specimens have somewhat protruding upper jaws.[47]
  • Remains of a Triassic ichthyosaur were discovered in Sonora, Mexico.[48]
  • Callaway and Massare regarded the genus Phalarodon as a nomen dubium.[49]
  • Sander described the new species
    Cymbospondylus buchseri
    .

1990s

A tour guide describes Shonisaurus at Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park

1990

  • Bradley Kosch of Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park criticized Camp's 1980 reconstruction of the park's famous Shonisaurus popularis as having too short a backbone and overly deep ribs, responsible for its supposedly deep pot belly. He noted that the illustration differed from both the text of Camp's published description and his own private field notes.[38]
  • Stephen Jay Gould published an article about the tail bend in ichthyosaurs.[5]
  • warm blooded.[50]
  • Massare and Callaway observed that Triassic ichthyosaurs had more elongated body plans than their Jurassic successors.[46]

1991

1992

  • Field work on behalf of Alberta's Royal Tyrell Museum began in the
    Pardonet Formation.[30]
Close-up photograph of a Stenopterygius embryo
  • Judy Massare proposed an explanation for the high percentage of pregnant Stenopterygius at Holzmaden. She speculated that the area was used as a breeding ground, the way whales congregate to give birth in areas of shallow water today. The coordination of a large number of births at the same time and place would increase the young's chances of survival because there would be too many for the local predator population to eat. Massare suggested that another ichthyosaur genus, Leptopterygius (now known as Leptonectes), was one such local predator that may have fed on vulnerable young ichthyosaurs.[52]
  • mosasaurs because they would not be in direct competition with each other. Instead she posited a connection to an extinction event that affected cephalopods at the boundary between the Cenomanian and Turonian ages. She proposed that the disappearance of these many cephalopod species may have deprived ichthyosaurs of their food source and caused their extinction.[55]

1993

  • Charles Deeming and others published a paper on the 1985 ichthyosaur embryo discovered in Somerset. They observed that many pregnant ichthyosaur specimens contain fetuses oriented head-first toward the birth canal even though they were probably born tail-first as a precaution to prevent drowning. This suggests that there may have been complications during the pregnancy, like the fetus being too large to pass through the birth canal. If the decomposing fetus remained trapped in the mother, it would very likely kill her.[56]
Fossils of Cymbospondylus
Artist's restoration of Stenopterygius
  • Jennifer Hogler re-examined the tails of the early large ichthyosaurs Cymbospondylus and Shonisaurus, finding the wedge-shaped vertebrae that form the tail-bend that composes the tail fluke. This find contradicted the widespread idea that these early ichthyosaurs had straight tails and therefore lacked well-developed flukes.[57]
  • Russell described the species that would later come to be known as
    Arthropterygius chrisorum
    .
  • McGowan described the species that would later come to be known as Leptonectes solei.

1994

  • Friedrich Quenstedt's early research on the ichthyosaurs at Holzmaden. He attributed the bulk of this confusion to Quenstedt's unorthodox naming practices, which often exceeded the two-named binomials of standard biological nomenclature to consist of three or four names. Further, the fossils themselves were poorly organized and many of the type specimens he founded species on were unlabeled. Hungerbuhler named two new species of his own: Stenopterygius cuniceps and S. macrophasma.[58]
  • Christopher McGowan named the new species of Shastasaurus discovered in British Columbia S. neoscapularis.[43] He also reviewed the species previously referred to the genus, finding many of them to be dubious, like S. altus, S. careyi, S. carinthiacus, and S. osmonti. However, two previously described species, the type, S. pacificus, and the referred species S. alexandrae were found to be valid. He criticized Merriam for oversplitting Shastasaurus because most of the resulting names were useless and mislead the paleontological community into thinking that the genus was better understood than it really was.[30]
  • Vaca Muerta Formation of Argentina.[42]
  • Bardet and others reported Platypterygius fossils from late Cenomanian rocks in Bavaria. These were the remains latest known ichthyosaurs.[55]
  • Fernández described the species that would later come to be known as Stenopterygius cayi.

1995

  • January: A man named Chris Moore discovered much of the front half of an ichthyosaur skeleton in the
    Belemnite Marls of Seatown, Dorset. The specimen was a juvenile of a new Leptopterygius species, named L. moorei after Moore.[59] In life, the specimen was probably about 8 feet long.[39]
Skeleton of Mixosaurus
  • McGowan renamed the ichthyosaur genus Leptopterygius to Leptonectes.
    Hudsonelpidia brevirostris
    .
  • Martill claimed that despite an abundance of ichthyosaur specimens with preserved soft tissue, there was no evidence that ichthyosaur skin was covered in scales.[15]
  • Tichy described the new species Omphalosaurus wolfi.
  • Nicholls and Brinkman described the new genus and species
    Parvinatator wapitiensis
    .

1996

  • Motani and others argued that sharks are the best modern analogues for ichthyosaurs because of their similar body plans.[54]
  • McGowan reported the serendipitous discovery of evidence for a new giant ichthyosaur species in a museum collection. He was studying the ichthyosaur fossils curated by the
    Macgowania janiceps
    .
  • Motani, You, and McGowan observed that the primitive ichthyosaur
    Chensaurus had had a relatively large number of vertebrae. This suggests that it swam in an eel-like fashion. The researchers interpreted the course of ichthyosaur evolution as starting with an eel-like body plan, transitioning to a jack-like body plan, and reaching its culmination in a tuna-like body plan.[61]
  • Dal Sasso and Pinna described the new genus and species
    Besanosaurus leptorhynchus
    .

1997

Artist's restoration of Utatsusaurus
Skeleton of Suevoleviathan

1998

  • Motani, Minoura, and Ando published a discussion of the ichthyosaur Utatsusaurus. They noted its primitive position in the ichthyosaur family tree and the same number of vertebrae in the front part of its body as modern catsharks. They interpreted Utatsusaurus as a maneuverable shallow water predator that swam with eel-like undulations along most of its body length.[63]
Artist's restoration of Eurhinosaurus
  • Maisch named the family Leptonectidae for a clade including Eurhinosaurus, Excalibosaurus, and Leptonectes. Distinguishing traits of the family include their large eyes, long flippers consisting of three or four main "digits", and their long over-biting snouts.[39]
  • Maisch and
    Wimanius odontopalatus
    .
  • Maisch and Matzke described the new genus Contectopalatus. It had a high crest running the midlength of its cranium for jaw muscle attachment giving it a powerful bite. It also would have been about 16 feet long in life, making it twice as long as any previously discovered mixosaurid.[25]
  • Maisch erected the genus Suevoleviathan to house the species Leptopterygius disinteger.[49]
  • Darren Naish debunked the 1986 claim by Jurgen Riess that ichthyosaurs swam with their front flippers rather than their tail flukes. He concluded "if an animal has a propulsive surface on the end of its tail, it uses it."[64]
Artist's restoration of Contectopalatus
  • Efimov described the species that would later come to be known as
    Brachypterygius pseudoscythius
    .
  • Brinkmann described the species that would later come to be known as
    Mixosaurus kuhnschnyderi
    .

1999

  • Ryosuke Motani published a phylogeny of the ichthyosaurs. Motani regarded Thaisaurus as "incertae sedis" due to its pronounced similarity to Chaohusaurus and how little was known about its fossils.[46] He also erected two new genera, Macgowania (named in honor of McGowan) and Isfjordosaurus (named after Isfjord, Spitsbergen).[20]
  • The expedition to the Sikanni Chief River, British Columbia led by Elizabeth Nicholls of the Royal Tyrell Museum excavated the animal's 18 foot long skull, which had to be split into pieces for removal. These pieces were so heavy a cargo helicopter was needed to transport them. The largest weighed 8,860 lbs.[7]
  • McGowan and Motani reported the results of their re-examination of the Shonisaurus specimens described by Camp from Berlin-Ichthyosaur state park. They concluded that of the three species Camp described from among the remains, only the type and most abundant species S. popularis was valid. The other two species he named, S. silberlingi and S. mulleri, were merely junior synonyms of S. popularis.[38]
  • Motani, Rothschild, and Wahl found that Temnodontosaurus had eyes up to 10 inches in diameter, the largest known of any animal.[29]
  • Fernandez described the new ichthyosaur genus
    Mollesaurus periallus
    .
A reconstructed skeleton of Undorosaurus

March 6th

September

21st century

2000s

Tail fluke of Aegirosaurus

2000

  • Ryosuke Motani published an article on ichthyosaurs in Scientific American that documented the discovery of Utatsusaurus.[69]
  • Swiss watch maker Rolex honored Elizabeth Nicholls as a Rolex Laureate and bestowed on her a $100,000 stipend, covering much of the expenses generated by her field work.[7]
  • Sander expressed doubt as to whether or not Omphalosaurus was really an ichthyosaur. He also cast doubt on the idea that the limb bones from Spitsbergen referred to the genus by Carl Wiman actually belonged to the same kind of animal as the jaws discovered by J. C. Merriam that served as its type specimen.[25]
  • Maisch and Matzke erected the new genus Callawayia for the species Shastasaurus neoscapularis.[70] They also erected the new genus Phantomosaurus.
  • Yin and others described the new genus and species
    Shastasaurus liangae
    .

May

  • Nathalie Bardet and Marta Fernandez erected the new genus
    Solnhofen lithographic limestone in over 50 years prior to its naming.[24] The type specimen preserved extensive soft tissue traces. Bardet and Fernandez reported the presence of tiny scales covering the animal.[71] They disagreed with Martill, who claimed in 1995 that no evidence of a scaley covering existed in ichthyosaurs.[15]

2001

Skeleton of Mixosaurus
  • Maisch and Matzke recognized the genus Phalarodon as diagnostic rather than dubious.[49] They referred the species "Mixsaurus" major of the German Muschelkalk to that genus, and noted that this represented the first report of Phalarodon in that locality.[72]
  • Nicholls and
    Metashastasaurus for the species Shastasaurus neoscapularis.[73] However, since the genus Callawayia had already been named for this species by Maisch and Matzke it was never accepted as valid by the scientific community. Nicholls and Manabe also reported that since field work began in the Pardonet Formation of British Columbia's Pink Mountains, 65 ichthyosaur specimens had been recovered.[30]
  • neurotoxins in the fish or shellfish that they ate before sinking to their death. They compared their hypothesis to modern mass whale deaths off the coast of New England. However, this interpretation is considered doubtful as there is no evidence linking mass whale deaths with consumption of poisonous sealife.[33]
  • Linares, Mexico. They expressed interest in returning to Mexico to study the remains further and search for new finds.[42]
  • Paleontologist Ben Kear collaborated with radiographer George Kourlis to perform a CT scan of Platypterigius. They found that its inner ear bones were so thick that they could not transmit sound vibrations and concluded animal must have been deaf. The scan also exposed the sensory structures inside its nose that allowed it to smell as well as an unusual system of "channels and grooves". The researchers found embryonic remains inside a Platypteriguis from Hughenden, Queensland, as well as the remains of the belemnites, fish, and turtle hatchlings it ate.[74]
  • Arkhangelsky described the species that would later come to be known as Brachypterygius alekseevi.

2002

  • Li and You described the new species Cymbospondylus asiaticus. The known remains of this species consisted of two skulls excavated from the Late Triassic Falang Formation of Guizhou Province, China. This was the first known example of the genus in Asia.[75]
  • sharks.[74]
  • Peter Doyle gave an interview to New Scientist magazine discussing acid-etched belemnite shells, that he believed originated as ichthyosaur vomit.[32]
  • Ryosuke Motani compared the bodies and hydrodynamics of aquatic life with a "thunniform" body plan like dolphins,
    lamnid sharks, tunas, and the ichthyosaur Stenopterygius quadriscissus. He modeled the motions of a thunniform body and its interaction with the water finding that, contrary to the conclusions of previous research, the tail fin of a thunniform animal was evolved to enable cruising at large body sizes rather than for "propuslive efficiency". He hypothesized that the similar body plans shared between ichthyosaurs and tunas suggest similar high swimming speeds and metabolic rates.[50]
Illustration of an Ophthalmosaurus skull
  • Stuart Humphries and Graeme Ruxton published a study on the eyes of Ophthalmosaurus.[76] They calculated its eyes to be two and half to four times as light sensitive as the modern elephant seal. Since elephant seals can themselves dive thousands of feet deep, the researchers concluded that increased light sensitivity in deep water was probably not the only evolutionary pressure behind the evolution of large eyes in Ophthalmosaurus. Its large eyes would have given it exceptionally clear vision as well, which would have been useful for tracking small prey and in possible social behavior.[67]
  • Thegarten Lingham-Soliar argued against Nathalie Bardet's attribution of ichthyosaur extinction to the loss of their preferred food sources in the Cenomanian-Turonian extinction event expanded on his own 1999 attribution of ichthyosaur extinction to biotic factors. During the Cretaceous the evolution of many fish groups trended towards faster swimming body types, making them harder to hunt for adult ichthyosaurs and harder to escape from for newborn ichthyosaurs. This ecological scene favored ambush predators like plesiosaurs and the newly evolved mosasaurs over the ichthyosaurs, who succumbed to the competition.[65]
  • Maisch and Lehmann described the new species
    Omphalosaurus peyeri
    .

2003

  • Elizabeth Nicholls, Chen Wei, and Makato Manabe published an extensive description of a new, complete specimen of Qianichthyosaurus from Guizhou. They observed that it was very similar to the genus Toretocnemus from California and concluded that similar ichthyosaur faunas spanned the Pacific Ocean during the Late Triassic.[24]
  • Maisch and Matzke described the new genus and species
    Quasianosteosaurus vikinghoegdai
    .
Barracudasauroides panxianensis

2004

  • Schmitz and others described the species that would later come to be known as
    Phalarodon callawayi
    .
  • Nicholls and Manabe described the species that would later come to be known as Shastasaurus sikkaniensis.

2006

  • Maxwell and Caldwell described the new genus and species
    Maiaspondylus lindoei
    .
  • Jiang and others described the species that would later come to be known as
    Barracudasauroides panxianensis
    .
  • Fröbisch, Sander and Rieppel described the new species
    Cymbospondylus nichollsi
    .

2007

2008

  • Maisch described the new genus and species
    Hauffiopteryx typicus
    .
  • Arkhangelsky and others described the new species
    Platypterygius ochevi
    .
  • Jiang and others described the new genus and species
    Xinminosaurus catactes
    .

2010s

2010

  • Maxwell described the new genus Arthropterygius[77]
  • Druckenmiller and Maxwell described the new genus and species
    Athabascasaurus bitumineus[78]
Skull bones of Acamptonectes.

2011

  • Fischer and others described the new genus and species
    Sveltonectes insolitus[81]

2012

Artist's restoration of Thalattoarchon.
Artist's restoration of Sclerocormus.

2013

2014

2015

2016

  • Jiang and others described the new genus and species
    Sclerocormus parviceps.[102]
  • Lomax described the new genus and species Wahlisaurus.
  • Lomax and Massare described the new species
    I. somersetensis
    .
  • Tyborowski described the new species
    Cryopterygius kielanae
    .
  • A study of taxonomic richness, disparity and evolutionary rates of
    ichthyosaurs throughout the Cretaceous period is published by Fischer et al. (2016).[103]
  • A restudy of "Platypterygius" campylodon is published by Fischer (2016), who transfers this species to the genus Pervushovisaurus.[104]
  • A revision of the ichthyosaur material of the British Middle and Late Jurassic referable to Ophthalmosaurus icenicus is published by Moon & Kirton (2016).[105]

2017

2018

2019

2020

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Ichthyosaurs", page 65.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Ellis (2003); "The Ichthyosaurs", page 67.
  3. ^ Emling (2009); in passim.
  4. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Ichthyosaurs", pages 70–71.
  5. ^ a b c Ellis (2003); "The Ichthyosaurs", page 71.
  6. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Ichthyosaurs", pages 71–72.
  7. ^ a b c d e Ellis (2003); "The Ichthyosaurs", page 90.
  8. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Ichthyosaurs", pages 91–92.
  9. ^ a b c Ellis (2003); "The Ichthyosaurs", page 107.
  10. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Ichthyosaurs", pages 114–116.
  11. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Ichthyosaurs", pages 67–68.
  12. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Ichthyosaurs", page 68.
  13. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Marine Reptiles: An Overview", page 21.
  14. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Ichthyosaurs", page 70.
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References

External links