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A strange new chelonioid turtle from the Latest Cretaceous Phosphates of Morocco

France de LAPPARENT de BROIN, Nathalie BARDET, Mbarek AMAGHZAZ & Saïd MESLOUH

en Comptes Rendus Palevol 13 (2) - Pages 87-95

Published on 28 February 2014

A new genus and species of huge marine turtle (superfamily Chelonioidea, epifamily Dermochelyoidae) is described from the Maastrichtian Phosphates of the Oulad Abdoun Basin of Morocco. A new type of feeding apparatus, adapted for a powerful crushing pattern, illustrates the noteworthy diversity of fossil vertebrates of the Maastrichtian-Ypresian Phosphates of Morocco. No other crushing cryptodire or bothremydid pleurodire has this morphology. During the Maastrichtian, the known crushing pattern of chelonioids was different, close to that of modern cheloniids, as illustrated in Morocco in the Maastrichtian Ganntour Basin and the Palaeogene Oulad Abdoun Basin. This new taxon exhibits unusual cranial characters (fusion of premaxillae associated with a backward and dorsal retraction of the naris, horizontal stretching of the dorsal meatus quadrati), that are shared only with another new turtle, known also from the same Maastrichtian Phosphates of Morocco.


Keywords:

Phosphates, Morocco, Maastrichtian, Turtle, Dermochelyoidae, New crushing pattern

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