Tambatitanis (meaning "Tamba giant", after Tamba, the name given to the northwest of Kansai, Japan[1]) is an extinct genus of titanosauriform, possibly a titanosaurian, sauropod dinosaur from the Early Cretaceous (early Albian) aged Ohyamashimo Formation of the Sasayama Group. It is known from a single species, Tambatitanis amicitiae, known from a partial skeleton.[1]

Quick Facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Tambatitanis
Temporal range: Early Cretaceous, 112.6–109.0 Ma
Albian
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Caudal vertebrae of Tambatitanis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Clade: Saurischia
Clade: Sauropodomorpha
Clade: Sauropoda
Clade: Macronaria
Clade: Titanosauria
Genus: Tambatitanis
Saegusa & Ikeda, 2014
Type species
Tambatitanis amicitiae
Saegusa & Ikeda, 2014
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Discovery and naming

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Dentary of Tambatitanis

The holotype specimen of the Tambaitanis, MNHAH D-1029280 was initially discovered in August 2006, by Shigeru Murakami and Kiyoshi Adachi in the reddish mudstone bed of the Ohyamashimo Formation (Lower Formation of the Sasayama Group) on a riverbed of the Sasayama RIver in Kamitaki, Sannan-Cho, Tamba-Sasayama city, of Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan.[2] It took five field seasons, from 2006 to 2010 to excavate a fossil because access to the skeleton was only available during the winter when the water level of the river becomes lowest. It was originally called 'Tamba-Ryu' before the publication in 2014. The specimen is somewhat semi-articulated and includes teeth, a braincase, a dentary, an atlas, a fragmental cervical vertebra, dorsal ribs, two fragmental dorsal vertebrae, a pubis, an ilium, sacral spines, presumable first sacral ribs, 22 caudal vertebrae, and 17 chevrons.[1]

In 2014, Haruo Saegusa and Tadahiro Ikeda described Tambatitanis amicitiae as a new genus and species of titanosauriform sauropod based on these remains. The generic name Tambatitanis is derived from the words, Tamba, the city where the fossil was discovered, with the Ancient Greek word "titanis", meaning titan. The specific name, amicitiae was derived from the Latin word "amicitia", referring to the friendship between 2 discoverers of this fossil.[1]

Classification

Phylogenetic analysis from Saegusa and Ikeda (2014) suggests Tambatitanis was Euhelopodidae, but its specific placement is uncertain among this group due to polytomy shown in the matrix, which is mainly based on D'Emic (2012).[3] In contrast, the describers of Ruixinia recovered this taxon within Titanosauria based on their phylogenetic analysis in 2023, the cladogram of which can be seen below:[4]

Titanosauriformes

Paleoecology

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Life reconstruction of Tambatitanis

Tambatitanis is known from the Ohyamashimo Formation (Sasayama Group), which dates to the early–middle Albian age from the end of the Early Cretaceous.[5] These layers are predominantly made up by sandstones, mudstones, and conglomerates. The depositional environment represents a fluvial system with a subhumid to semi-arid climate.[6] Dinosaur teeth are common in various localities throughout this formation including those belonging to other theropods (dromaeosaurids, therizinosaurs, and tyrannosauroids) as well as sauropods, ankylosaurs, and iguanodontians.[7] Several dinosaurian oospecies (egg fossils) have also described, including Himeoolithus, Subtiliolithus, Nipponoolithus, and Prismatoolithus.[8] The monstersaurian lizard Morohasaurus and the troodontid theropod Hypnovenator[5] are known from the formation.[9] Fossils of an unnamed neoceratopsian, including several skull bones, are also known from the formation.[10] Although not specified as this Formation in original descriptions, Sasayama Group have some other fossil fauna known, such as eutherian Sasayamamylos,[11] scincomorph Pachygenys,[12] two frogs Hyogobatrachus and Tambabatrachus.[13]

References

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