TL;DR: This new basal sauropod lived at the same time as the eusauropod Lourinhasaurus alenquerensis from Portugal and shows primitive features such as a slightly curved ischium with an unexpanded distal end, amphicoelous vertebrae, neural spine not bifid and an unforked chevron.
Abstract: The Galve fossil sites (province of Teruel, Spain) have provided many Mesozoic vertebrate remains. Among these are isolated sauropod dinosaur bones, including one taxon reported only from this locality, Aragosaurus ischiaticus. Here, a new species is named from the Tithonian deposits of the Villar del Arzobispo Formation, of Galve (Teruel province, Spain), Galveosaurus herreroi gen. et sp. nov. It is represented by two humeri, one sternal plate, one ischium, one scapula, one cervical vertebra, one caudal dorsal vertebra, five caudal vertebrae, one Y-shaped chevron and some fragments of ribs. This new species is an eusauropod dinosaur that shows primitive features such as a slightly curved ischium with an unexpanded distal end, amphicoelous vertebrae, neural spine not bifid and an unforked chevron. It appears to be closer to cetiosaurid genera such as Barapasaurus or Cetiosaurus. This new basal sauropod lived at the same time as the eusauropod Lourinhasaurus alenquerensis from Portugal. These are both relict genera that survived in the Iberian Peninsula when more derived neosauropods, such as Losillasaurus or Dinheirosaurus, had taken over other parts of Iberia.
TL;DR: The presence of sauropod caudal procoelous vertebrae is reported for the first time in the Upper Jurassic of Portugal, with specimens described from the localities of Baleal, Paimogo, Praia da Areia Branca, Porto das Barcas, and Praia Da Corva.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied a humerus (MDS-VPCR, 214) recovered from the site of Valdepalazuelos-Tenadas del Carrascal (Burgos, Spain).
Abstract: The present paper studies a humerus (MDS-VPCR, 214) recovered from the site of Valdepalazuelos-Tenadas del Carrascal (Burgos, Spain). Geologically, it is located at the base of the Rupelo Formation (Cameros Basin), which is Tithonian-Berriasian in age. This formation is interpreted as shallow lacustrine/palustrine deposits with low-gradient margins and periodic changes in the water level. MDS-VPCR, 214 is gracile and straight, and has a larger mediolateral expansion at its proximal end than at the distal end. The deltopectoral crest is well expanded anteroposteriorly and extends towards the midline of the shaft. The distal articular head has radial and ulnar condyles similar in degree of development and there is a narrow groove between them. The distal articular surface is not divided between the ulnar and radial condyles; this surface extends towards the anterior and posterior surfaces of the humerus. MDS-VPCR, 214 shows significant morphological differences with respect to the humeri of the Iberian sauropods of the Jurassic-Cretaceous transition such as the turiasaurians Losillasaurus, Zby and Turiasaurus, the basal macronarians Lourinhasaurus and Aragosaurus, and the titanosauriforms Lusotitan, Galvesaurus.A phylogenetic analysis of MDS-VPCR, 214 relates it to Titanosauriformes probably a basal brachiosaurid related with the english genus of Kimmeridgian Duriatitan. Therefore MDS-VPCR, 214 is assigned provisionally to aff. Duriatitan.
TL;DR: Phylogenetic analyses support the view that Turiasaurus, Losillasaurus and Galveosaurus form a monophyletic Turiasauria clade that lies just outside of Neosauropoda, but the relationships of other taxa become less stable.
Abstract: The skull of Turiasaurus is known from a nearly complete posterior section (e.g. braincase, skull roof, quadrates and left mandible) and fragments of the snout (e.g. portions of premaxilla, maxilla, nasal and lacrimal). Skull material of the holotypic individual was discovered in close association. Comparisons with other sauropods suggest that the Turiasaurus skull most closely resembled those of Jobaria, Camarasaurus and Mamenchisaurus youngi, possessing large spatulate teeth, enlarged and partially retracted external nares, and a broadly rounded muzzle. The list of autapomorphies for Turiasaurus is augmented by the new cranial data, including features such as: (1) a shelf-like projection of bone from the medial surface of the distal end of the maxillary ascending process; and (2) a rounded boss-like area on the lateral surface of the jugal. There are also unusual character states, such as the excavation of the posterior surfaces of the basal tubera (present in Turiasaurus and Losillasaurus) that probabl...