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Darting towards Storm Shelter: a minute dinosaur trackway from southern Africa

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Figshare2021-05-23 更新2026-04-28 收录
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https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Darting_towards_Storm_Shelter_a_minute_dinosaur_trackway_from_southern_Africa/13007240
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The archived data include:a) Table of ichnological morphometric parameters of Storm Shelter Grallator tracks, including standard track and trackway measurements, and speed calculations. b) Supplementary Figure 1 showing the sedimentological details at the ichnosite.c) Ichnological photogrammetric the cleaned and aligned 3D models of the tridactyl tracks mentioned in this paper. (email the author for the photographs used in the photogrammetric models)Abstract:Theropod dinosaurs are considered the main terrestrial carnivores in the Jurassic and Cretaceous. Their rise to dominance has been linked to, among others, body size changes in their early history, especially across the Triassic–Jurassic boundary. However, to qualitatively assess such temporal trends, robust skeletal and trace fossil data sets are needed globally. The richly fossiliferous southern African continental rock record in the main Karoo Basin offers an unparalleled perspective for such investigations. Herein, by documenting a newly discovered Early Jurassic trackway of very small, functionally tridactyl tracks near Storm Shelter (Eastern Cape) in South Africa, the track record can be expanded. Based on ichnological measurements at the ichnosite and digital 3D models, the footprint dimensions (length, width, splay), locomotor parameters (step length, stride, speed), and body size estimates of the trackmaker are presented. In comparison to other similar tracks, these footprints are not only the smallest Grallator-like tracks in the Clarens Formation, but also the most elongated dinosaur footprints in southern Africa to date. The tracks also show that the small-bodied bipedal trackmaker dashed across the wet sediment surface at an estimated running speed of ~12.5 km/h. During the dash, either as a predator or as a prey, the trackmaker’s small feet sunk hallux-deep into the sediment. The tracking surface is overgrown by fossilised microbial mats, which likely enhanced the footprint preservation. Based on track morphometrics and the regional dinosaur skeletal record, the trackmakers are attributed to Megapnosaurus rhodesiensis (formerly Syntarsus rhodesiensis), a small-to-medium-sized, early theropod common in southern Africa.
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2021-05-23
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