Published July 15, 2022 | Version v1
Other Open

Data for: Africa's oldest dinosaurs reveal early suppression of dinosaur distribution

  • 1. Yale University
  • 2. Virginia Tech
  • 3. National Museums and Monuments of Zimbabwe*
  • 4. ,
  • 5. Natural History Museum of Zimbabwe*
  • 6. Chipembele Wildlife Education Centre*
  • 7. Universidade de Sao Paulo
  • 8. Great Zimbabwe University

Description

The vertebrate lineages that would shape Mesozoic and Cenozoic terrestrial ecosystems originated across Triassic Pangaea. By the Late Triassic (Carnian Stage, ~235 Ma), cosmopolitan 'disaster faunas' had given way to highly endemic assemblages on the supercontinent. Testing the tempo and mode of the establishment of this endemism is challenging—there were few geographic barriers to dispersal across Pangaea during the Late Triassic. Instead, palaeolatitudinal climate belts, and not continental boundaries, are hypothesized to have controlled distribution. During this time of high endemism, dinosaurs began to disperse and thus offer an opportunity to test the timing and drivers of this biogeographic pattern. Increased sampling can test this prediction: if dinosaurs initially dispersed under palaeolatitudinal-driven endemism, then an assemblage similar to those of South America and India—including the earliest dinosaurs—should be present in Carnian deposits in south-central Africa. Here, we report a new Carnian assemblage from Zimbabwe which includes Africa's oldest definitive dinosaurs, including a nearly complete skeleton of the sauropodomorph Mbiresaurus raathi, gen. et sp. nov. This assemblage resembles those of other dinosaur-bearing Carnian assemblages, suggesting that a similar vertebrate fauna ranged high-latitude austral Pangaea. The distribution of the first dinosaurs is correlated with palaeolatitude-linked climatic barriers, and dinosaurian dispersal to the rest of the supercontinent was delayed until these barriers relaxed, suggesting that climatic controls influenced the initial composition of the terrestrial faunas that persist to this day.

Notes

Funding provided by: National Geographic Society
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100006363
Award Number: NGS-157R-18

Funding provided by: National Geographic Society
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100006363
Award Number: CP-R004-17

Funding provided by: National Science Foundation
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100000001
Award Number: Graduate Research Fellowship Program

Funding provided by: Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001807
Award Number: FAPESP 2020/07997-4

Files

Files (16.5 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:07ccf90c09e57216856c8903df599d35
16.5 kB Download

Additional details

Related works

Is derived from
10.5061/dryad.pg4f4qrqd (DOI)