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Bizarre tail weaponry in a transitional ankylosaur from subantarctic Chile.

Sergio Soto-AcuñaAlexander O VargasJonatan KaluzaMarcelo Leppe CartesJoao F BotelhoJosé Palma-LiberonaCarolina Simon-GutsteinRoy A FernándezHéctor OrtizVerónica MillaBárbara AravenaLeslie M E ManríquezJhonatan Alarcón-MuñozJuan Pablo PinoCristine TrevisanHéctor MansillaLuis Felipe HinojosaVicente Muñoz-WaltherDavid Rubilar-Rogers
Published in: Nature (2021)
Armoured dinosaurs are well known for their evolution of specialized tail weapons-paired tail spikes in stegosaurs and heavy tail clubs in advanced ankylosaurs1. Armoured dinosaurs from southern Gondwana are rare and enigmatic, but probably include the earliest branches of Ankylosauria2-4. Here we describe a mostly complete, semi-articulated skeleton of a small (approximately 2 m) armoured dinosaur from the late Cretaceous period of Magallanes in southernmost Chile, a region that is biogeographically related to West Antarctica5. Stegouros elengassen gen. et sp. nov. evolved a large tail weapon unlike any dinosaur: a flat, frond-like structure formed by seven pairs of laterally projecting osteoderms encasing the distal half of the tail. Stegouros shows ankylosaurian cranial characters, but a largely ancestral postcranial skeleton, with some stegosaur-like characters. Phylogenetic analyses placed Stegouros in Ankylosauria; specifically, it is related to Kunbarrasaurus from Australia6 and Antarctopelta from Antarctica7, forming a clade of Gondwanan ankylosaurs that split earliest from all other ankylosaurs. The large osteoderms and specialized tail vertebrae in Antarctopelta suggest that it had a tail weapon similar to Stegouros. We propose a new clade, the Parankylosauria, to include the first ancestor of Stegouros-but not Ankylosaurus-and all descendants of that ancestor.
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