Evaluation of tridactyl theropod tracks in southern Africa: quantitative morphometric analysis across the Triassic–Jurassic boundary

Doctoral Thesis

2020

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In the Mesozoic, dinosaur abundance and diversity steadily increased from the Carnian to the Triassic booming soon after the end Triassic Mass-Extinction event (ETE), marking a key period in archosaur history. In southern Africa, the Triassic–Jurassic Boundary (TJB) is contained in the richly fossiliferous, fluvio-lacustrine-aeolian Upper Triassic to Lower Jurassic strata of the Stormberg Group. More specifically, the middle Norian – Pliensbachian Elliot and Clarens formations (upper Stormberg Group) of main Karoo Basin, host a diverse tetrapod osteological and ichnite record. Due to an absence of high resolution radioisotopic age determinations, the exact stratigraphic placement of the TJB remains unknown. Although diverse ichnofossils attributed to Saurischians and Ornithischians are preserved in the Stormberg Group, the record is dominated by isolated tridactyl tracks that can be assigned to common ichnogenera like Grallator, Eubrontes and Kayentapus. Ideally, these track morphologies would reflect the trackmaker's autopod morphology, but complex interactions between the trackmaker and tracking substrate may affect the final footprint shape. Tracks with a high morphological preservation grade may be used to infer information (e.g., body length, hip height, weight) about the trackmaker, which is especially useful when skeletal remains are scarce, as is the case with theropod body fossils in the Elliot and Clarens formations. Herein, we present the findings of an extensive southern African field-based study to quantify the morphological variation of Grallator, Eubrontes and Kayentapus tracks across the TJB in the upper Stormberg Group. Furthermore, this study produced the first detrital zircon Uranium–Lead (U-Pb) LA-ICPMS ages of the major ichnosites from this region, and confirmed that the TJB is within the Elliot Formation, near the boundary of the lower and upper Elliot Formation (i.e., near the contact of the informal lEF and uEF). Across this contact, the considered tridactyl tracks become more abundant, larger and have a less pronounced medial digit projection. These morphological changes are gradational, with tracks from the Clarens Formation being distinct to tracks from the lEF, while the uEF tracks being intermediate between the lEF and Clarens Formation. A decrease in the mesaxony (Dp/TS ratio) and a decrease in medial digit projection relative to track length can be detected in both small and large tridactyl tracks. These apparent trends in the upper Stormberg Group are consistent with global tridactyl trends, which suggest an overall increase in theropod abundance and body size across the Jurassic. Moreover, the reason for the less prominent medial pedal digit is linked to a better weight distribution across the autopod in the increasingly larger theropods. Last but not least, Grallator, Eubrontes and Kayentapus ichnogenera which may be attributed to at least three different groups of theropod-like trackmakers, suggest a higher palaeo-diversity and abundance of tridactyl dinosaurs in southern Africa than is known from the osteological record.
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