Life restoration of the mosasaur Hainosaurus feeding on a cephalopod

This timeline of mosasaur research is a chronologically ordered list of important fossil discoveries, controversies of interpretation, and taxonomic revisions of mosasaurs, a group of giant marine lizards that lived during the Late Cretaceous Epoch. Although mosasaurs went extinct millions of years before humans evolved, humans have coexisted with mosasaur fossils for millennia. Before the development of paleontology as a formal science, these remains would have been interpreted through a mythological lens. Myths about warfare between serpentine water monsters and aerial thunderbirds told by the Native Americans of the modern western United States may have been influenced by observations of mosasaur fossils and their co-occurrence with creatures like Pteranodon and Hesperornis.[1]

The scientific study of mosasaurs began in the late 18th century with the serendipitous discovery of a large fossilized skeleton in a limestone mine near Maastricht in the Netherlands.[2] The fossils were studied by local scholar Adriaan Gilles Camper, who noted a resemblance to modern monitor lizards in correspondence with renowned French anatomist Georges Cuvier.[3] Nevertheless, the animal was not scientifically described until the English Reverend William Daniel Conybeare named it Mosasaurus, after the river Meuse located near the site of its discovery.[4]

By this time the first mosasaur fossils from the United States were discovered by the Lewis and Clark Expedition, and the first remains in the country to be scientifically described were reported slightly later from New Jersey.[5] This was followed by an avalanche of discoveries by the feuding Bone War paleontologists Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh in the Smoky Hill Chalk of Kansas.[6] By the end of the century a specimen of Tylosaurus would be found that preserved its scaley skin.[7] Later Samuel Wendell Williston mistook fossilized tracheal rings for the remains of a fringe of skin running down the animal's back, which subsequently became a common inaccuracy in artistic restorations.[8]

The 20th century soon saw the discovery in Alabama of a strange mosasaur called Globidens, with rounded teeth suited to crushing shells.[9] Mosasaur remains were also discovered in Africa and California.[10] In 1967 Dale Russell published a scientific monograph dedicated to mosasaurs.[11] Embryonic remains in the 1990s confirmed that mosasaurs gave live birth like in ichthyosaurs.[12] The 1990s also saw a revival and escalation of a debate regarding whether or not some supposed mosasaur toothmarks in ammonoid shells were actually made by limpets.[13] By the end of the century, the evolutionary relationship between mosasaurs and snakes as well as the possible involvement of mosasaurs in the extinction of the aforementioned ichthyosaurs became hot button controversies.[14]

The debates regarding snakes, toothmarks, and ichthyosaurs spilled over into the early 21st century. These discussions were also accompanied by the discovery of many new taxa, including new species of Globidens, Mosasaurus, and Tylosaurus as well as entirely new genera like Yaguarasaurus and Tethysaurus.[15] In 2013, Lindgren, Kaddumi, and Polcyn reported the discovery of a Prognathodon specimen from Jordan that preserved the soft tissues of its scaley skin, flippers and tail. Significantly, the tail resembled those of modern carcharinid sharks, although the bottom lobe of the tail fin was longest in the mosasaur whereas shark tails have longer upper lobes.[16]

Prescientific

A 19th century restoration of the life of the Late Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway depicting a mosasaur attacking a Pteranodon. The basking behavior of the other marine reptiles is inaccurate as neither mosasaurs nor plesiosaurs were capable of leaving the water.

The Cheyenne believe that there were many different kinds of water monsters that lived not only in lakes, rivers, and springs but also high bluffs and hills. The locations given as water monster habitat are similar to the locations where local marine fossils can be found as fossils often erode out of hillsides or stream banks. The Cheyennes feared the water monsters, because they could be dangerous predators or capsize their canoes. Even in modern times, tradition-minded Cheyenne sometimes take pains to avoid sleeping too close to springs due to fears of water monsters.[21]

18th century

Illustration of the type specimen of Mosasaurus

1760s

1764

1766

1770s

1772

1780s

1784

1790s

Silhouette of Adriaan Gilles Camper

1795

1798

1799

19th century

Meriwether Lewis (left) and William Clark (right)

1800s

1804

September 10th

1810s

1818

1820s

Portrait of Rev. William Conybeare

1820

1822

1829

1830s

Skull of Mosasaurus missouriensis

1830

1839

1840s

1845

1850s

The Mosasaurus from the Crystal Palace

1850

1853

1860s

19th century life restoration of Tylosaurus

1868

1869

1870s

Photograph of O. C. Marsh's 1872 field crew

1870

November

1871

1872

Fossil skin impression of Tylosaurus

1874

1878

1880s

Skull of Hainosaurus bernardi

1885

1889

1890s

Skull of Platecarpus coryphaeus prominently exhibiting the sclerotic ring in its eye

1891

1892

1894

1895

Portrait of Samuel Wendell Williston
Life restoration of Tylosaurus proriger

1897

1898

Williston also discussed mosasaur life appearance and behavior. He compared mosasaur scales to those of monitor lizards and misinterpreted some fossilized cartilage as evidence for a fringe of soft tissue down mosasaurs' backs.[50] He hypothesized that mosasaurs left the safety of the water to lay eggs on land.[51] The paleobiology of individual mosasaur taxa also received Williston's attention. He thought the genus Clidastes as an inhabitant of near-surface waters.[52] In contrast, Williston interpreted Platecarpus as a "deep diver" and thought Tylosaurus fed primarily on other marine reptiles.[53]

He also elaborated on his earlier research into mosasaur biostratigraphy. He observed that Tylosaurus ranged throughout the Smoky Hill Chalk but went extinct around the time the Fort Pierre Shale was deposited. Platecarpus was also only known from the Niobrara Formation. Clidastes was only known from the upper Niobrara.[54]

1899

20th century

Outdated life restoration of Mosasaurus with a dorsal fringe
Skeletal mount of Plioplatecarpus

1900s

1902

1904

1905

1907

1910s

The "Bunker" Tylosaurus skeleton
Jaw and teeth of Globidens
Life restoration of Clidastes

1911

1912

1914

1917

1918

1920s

1920

1922

1930s

Life restoration of Goronyosaurus

1930

1935

1937

1939

1940s

Life restoration of Plotosaurus

1942

1945

1950s

1951

1960s

Fossil shell of the ammonoid Placenticeras, showing putative mosasaur toothmarks

1960

1963

1967

Dale Russell published a monograph on American mosasaurs.[11] This monograph contained significant taxonomic revisions for the family. Among these were his conclusion that Platecarpus coryphaeus and Platecarpus ictericus were likely junior synonyms of P. tympaniticus while P. planfirons was too poorly preserved to be classified confidently at all.[73] Russell also dismissed the species Tylosaurus dyspelor described by Cope as a dubious probable-synonym of Tylosaurus proriger.[74]

Russell also published additional information and speculation on mosasaur biostratigraphy. He reported the presence of mosasaur vertebrae up to 90 million years old among the Turonian fossils curated by the University of Kansas Museum of Natural History.[75] Another of this work's significant contributions to mosasaur biostratigraphy concerned the mosasaurs of the Smoky Hill Chalk. Russell devised two biostratigraphic zones based on the Chalk's mosasaur fossils. The lower zone was characterized by Clidastes liodontus, Platecarpus coryphaeus, and Tylosaurus nepaeolicus. The upper was home to Clidastes, Platecarpus ictericus, and Tylosaurus proriger.[54] He regarded Platecarpus and Tylosaurus as deep water animals but concluded that the biostratigraphic evidence from the Smoky Hill mosasaurs suggested that the Chalk's depositional environment was becoming shallower and nearer to the ancient coastline over time.[76] Russell also argued that by the end of the Late Cretaceous, mosasaurs were converging on the body plan that characterized the first ichthyosaurs during the Triassic period and gradually replacing these older marine reptiles.[77]

1969

1970s

Holotype jaws and teeth of the species Globidens alabamaensis from the Selma Group of Alabama

1970

1972

1975

1977

1980s

1980

1982

1985

1986

Skull of Platecarpus

1987

Fossils of Ectenosaurus
Type specimen of Selmasaurus russelli

1988

1989

1990s

Life restoration of Eonatator

1990

Life restoration of Opetiosaurus.

1991

1992

Skull of Prognathodon currii

1993

1994

Life restoration of Plioplatecarpus

January

1995

Life restoration of the shark Squalicorax. Squalicorax teeth are often associated with mosasaur fossils

1996

September

Life restoration of the shark Cretoxyrhina. Cretoxyrhina teeth are often associated with mosasaur fossils.

1997

Life restoration of Prognathodon saturator
Fossil shell of the ammonoid Placenticeras, showing putative mosasaur toothmarks

1998

August 8th

Jaw and teeth of Carinodens

1999

21st century

Life restoration of Halisaurus

2000s

2000

Carsosaurus fossils

2001

Mounted skull of Kourisodon
Skull of Prognathodon currii

2002

September

Life restoration of Globidens

2003

Life restoration of Dallasaurus

2004

May

2005

2007

Life restoration of Prognathodon, showing a shark-like tail fluke

2008

2009

Mandible of Harranasaurus

2010s

2011

Life restoration of Plesioplatecarpus

2012

2013

Soft tissue and microstructures recovered from the humerus of a Prognathodon specimen in 2013

2015

Skeleton of Phosphorosaurus ponpetelegans

2016

2017

Life restoration of Kaikaifilu

2018

2019

2020s

2020

2021

Maxilla of Xenodens

2022

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Mayor (2005); "Cheyenne Fossil Knowledge", pages 209–211.
  2. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 195.
  3. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 196.
  4. ^ a b c d Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 197.
  5. ^ For the Lewis and Clark mosasaur discovery, see Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", pages 172-173 and Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 216. For the New Jersey find, see only Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", pages 173.
  6. ^ Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", in passim.
  7. ^ a b Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 178.
  8. ^ Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", pages 178–180.
  9. ^ For the date of discovery, see Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 219. For remarks about its diet, see pages 228–229.
  10. ^ For African mosasaurs, see Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 222 and page 225. For Californian mosasaurs, see Hilton (2003); "Mosasaurs", pages 107–111.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 198.
  12. ^ a b c Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 180.
  13. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 235–238.
  14. ^ For the controversy regarding the relationship between mosasaurs and snakes, see Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 245–250. For the possible role mosasaurs played in the extinction of the ichthyosaurs, see ibid.; "The Ichthyosaurs," pages 114–116 and "The Mosasaurs", page 223.
  15. ^ For a recently described Globidens species, G. schurmanni see Martin (2007); in passim. For Mosasaurus prismaticus, see Sakurai and Shibuya (1999); in passim. For Tylosaurus kansasensis, see Everhart (2005b); in passim. For the recently described genus Yaguarasaurus, see Páramo-Fonseca (2000); in passim. For Tethysaurus, see Bardet, Superbiola, and Jalil (2003); in passim.
  16. ^ a b Lindgren, Kaddumi, and Polcyn (2013); in passim.
  17. ^ Mayor (2005); "Smoking the Monster's Bone: An Ancient Delaware Fossil Legend", page 68.
  18. ^ Mayor (2005); "Smoking the Monster's Bone: An Ancient Delaware Fossil Legend", page 69.
  19. ^ Mayor (2005); "Smoking the Monster's Bone: An Ancient Delaware Fossil Legend", page 70.
  20. ^ Mayor (2005); "Cheyenne Fossil Knowledge", pages 209–210.
  21. ^ a b Mayor (2005); "Cheyenne Fossil Knowledge", page 211.
  22. ^ Mayor (2005); "Water Monsters and Thunder Birds on the Prairie and in the Badlands", page 275.
  23. ^ Mayor (2005); "Water Monsters and Thunder Birds on the Prairie and in the Badlands", pages 275–276.
  24. ^ Mayor (2005); "Water Monsters and Thunder Birds on the Prairie and in the Badlands", page 235.
  25. ^ Mayor (2005); "Water Monsters and Thunder Birds on the Prairie and in the Badlands", page 237.
  26. ^ a b c Mulder, E.W.A., 2004, "Maastricht Cretaceous finds and Dutch pioneers in vertebrate palaeontology". In: Touret, J.L.R. & Visser, R.P.W. (eds). Dutch pioneers of the earth sciences, pp. 165-176. Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW), Amsterdam.
  27. ^ Rompen, P. 1995. Mosasaurus hoffmanni: De lotgevallen van een type-exemplaar. Thesis, University of Maastricht
  28. ^ Camper, A.G. (1800). "Lettre de A.G. Camper à G. Cuvier sur les ossemens fossiles de la montagne de St. Pierre, à Maëstricht". Journal de Physique. 51: 278–291.
  29. ^ For date see Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 172. For other details, see Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 216.
  30. ^ a b Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 172.
  31. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 196–197.
  32. ^ a b c d e f Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 219.
  33. ^ Russell, Dale. A. (6 November 1967). "Systematics and Morphology of American Mosasaurs" (PDF). Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History (Yale University).
  34. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 210.
  35. ^ a b c Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 208.
  36. ^ a b c d e f Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 175.
  37. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 213–214.
  38. ^ a b c d Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 179.
  39. ^ For C. planifrons, see Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", pages 164–165. For Tylosaurus nepaeolicus see Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 209.
  40. ^ a b c Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 227.
  41. ^ a b c d Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 214.
  42. ^ a b Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 176.
  43. ^ a b c d Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 167.
  44. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 220–221.
  45. ^ a b c Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 169.
  46. ^ Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", pages 169–170.
  47. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 211.
  48. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 213.
  49. ^ a b c Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 165.
  50. ^ Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", pages 178–179.
  51. ^ Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 181.
  52. ^ a b c Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 239.
  53. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 239–240.
  54. ^ a b c d e Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 170.
  55. ^ Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", pages 176–177.
  56. ^ a b c Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 229.
  57. ^ a b c Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 242.
  58. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 228–229.
  59. ^ a b c d Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 222.
  60. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 205.
  61. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 206.
  62. ^ a b c d e f Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 182.
  63. ^ a b c Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 177.
  64. ^ Lindgren, Kaddumi, and Polcyn (2013); "Introduction", page 2.
  65. ^ Hilton (2003); "Mosasaurs", page 107.
  66. ^ Hilton (2003); "Mosasaurs", page 108.
  67. ^ Hilton (2003); "Mosasaurs", page 110.
  68. ^ Hilton (2003); "Mosasaurs", pages 107–111.
  69. ^ Hilton (2003); "Mosasaurs", pages 109–110.
  70. ^ Hilton (2003); "Mosasaurs", pages 110–111.
  71. ^ Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 173.
  72. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 235.
  73. ^ For P. coryphaeus and P. ictericus as synonyms of P. tympaniticus, see Everhart (2005); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 171. For the dubious nature of P. planifrons, see page 165.
  74. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 207.
  75. ^ a b c Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 203.
  76. ^ For Russell's interpretation of Platecarpus and Tylosaurus as deep water animals, see Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 239. For the decreasing depth of the Western Interior Seaway as implied by mosasaur fossils, see Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 170.
  77. ^ a b c Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 200.
  78. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 222–223.
  79. ^ For the description of Tylosaurus zangerli, see Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 219. For the reclassification of "Clidastes" sternbergii to Halisaurus, see Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 165.
  80. ^ a b c Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 221.
  81. ^ Azzaroli, de Guili, and Torre (1972); in passim.
  82. ^ a b Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 184.
  83. ^ a b c d e Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 171.
  84. ^ Suzuki (1985); in passim.
  85. ^ a b c d Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 218.
  86. ^ Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 168.
  87. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 228. For the identity of the bony fish as Bananogmius, see Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 182.
  88. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 216–217.
  89. ^ a b c Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 223.
  90. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 230.
  91. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 232. Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 176.
  92. ^ For Clidastes as a shallow water animal, see Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 205. For Tylosaurus as a sperm whale analogue, see page 240.
  93. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 217.
  94. ^ a b c d Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 159.
  95. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 231–232.
  96. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 201.
  97. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 232.
  98. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 232–233.
  99. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Ichthyosaurs," page 114.
  100. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 225–226.
  101. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 234–235.
  102. ^ a b c Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 162.
  103. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 200–201.
  104. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 204.
  105. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 225.
  106. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 233.
  107. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 238–239.
  108. ^ a b Hilton (2003); "Mosasaurs", page 111.
  109. ^ a b c Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 220.
  110. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 244.
  111. ^ Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", pages 159–160.
  112. ^ Everhart (2005a); "Figure 9.10", page 184.
  113. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 217. Note that the number of embryos given by Ellis may not be correct, see Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 159.
  114. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 218–219.
  115. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 202.
  116. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 205–206.
  117. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 240.
  118. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 245.
  119. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 245–246.
  120. ^ Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", pages 185–186.
  121. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 215.
  122. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 230–231.
  123. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 236.
  124. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 236–237.
  125. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 237.
  126. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 216.
  127. ^ a b Ellis (2003); "The Ichthyosaurs," page 115.
  128. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 248.
  129. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 248–249.
  130. ^ Polcyn, Tchernov, and Jacobs (1999); in passim.
  131. ^ Sakurai and Shibuya (1999); in passim.
  132. ^ Kass (1999); in passim.
  133. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 247.
  134. ^ Páramo-Fonseca (2000); in passim.
  135. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 217–218.
  136. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", pages 237–238.
  137. ^ Ellis (2003); "The Mosasaurs", page 238.
  138. ^ Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", pages 165–167.
  139. ^ Dortangs et al. (2002); in passim.
  140. ^ Nicholls and Meckert (2002); in passim.
  141. ^ Polcyn, Tchernov, and Jacobs (2003); in passim.
  142. ^ Bardet, Superbiola, and Jalil (2003); in passim.
  143. ^ Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 163.
  144. ^ Everhart (2005a); "Enter the Mosasaurs", page 174.
  145. ^ Polcyn and Bell (2005); in passim.
  146. ^ Bardet et al. (2005); in passim.
  147. ^ Everhart (2005b); in passim.
  148. ^ Bell and Polcyn (2005); in passim.
  149. ^ Martin (2007); in passim.
  150. ^ Schulp et al. (2008); in passim.
  151. ^ Polcyn and Everhart (2008); in passim.
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  161. ^ Takuya Konishi; Michael W. Caldwell; Tomohiro Nishimura; Kazuhiko Sakurai; Kyo Tanoue (2015). "A new halisaurine mosasaur (Squamata: Halisaurinae) from Japan: the first record in the western Pacific realm and the first documented insights into binocular vision in mosasaurs". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 14 (10): 809–839. doi:10.1080/14772019.2015.1113447. S2CID 130644927.
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References