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Euhelopus

Euhelopus is a genus of sauropod dinosaur that lived between 143 and 133 million years ago during the Berriasian and Valanginian ages of the Early Cretaceous in what is now Shandong Province in China. It was a large quadrupedal herbivore. Like sauropods such as brachiosaurids and titanosaurs, Euhelopus had longer forelimbs than hindlimbs. This discovery was paleontologically significant because it represented the first dinosaur scientifically investigated from China: seen in 1913, rediscovered in 1922, excavated in 1923, and studied by T'an during the same year. Unlike most sauropod specimens, it has a relatively complete skull. Euhelopus was a long-necked sauropod similar to Mamenchisaurus, but its affinities are controversial. Most studies favor a close relationship between Euhelopus and titanosaurs, rather than mamenchisaurids.

Description
Size Since its original description, Euhelopus has often been considered a rather large sauropod. It has been thought to weigh about and attain an adult length of . Benson et al. estimated its mass at , whereas Larramendi et al. estimated it at . Overall anatomy Euhelopus was a relatively long-necked sauropod, with a 4-meter neck composed of 17 cervical vertebrae. The presacral vertebrae had a camellate pneumatic structure, made of many small pneumatic chambers, as is characteristic of titanosauriforms and some mamenchisaurids. Pneumatic chambers even extended into the ilium, as occurs in many titanosaurs. The humerus was apparently nearly as long as the femur, although there is some uncertainty in this ratio, as it is not certain that the humerus and femur from which this ratio was calculated belong to the same individual, and the femur in question is incomplete. Distinguishing anatomical features The original diagnosis by Wiman is outdated. A diagnosis is a statement of the anatomical features of an organism (or group) that collectively distinguish it from all other organisms. Some of the features in a diagnosis may be autapomorphies. An autapomorphy is a distinctive anatomical feature that is unique to an organism or group. According to a study by Jeffrey A. Wilson and Paul Upchurch in 2009, Euhelopus can be distinguished based on, among others, these autapomorphies: • The teeth are inclined to the front as proven by the edge of the enamel at the front of the tooth running more in the direction of the top and a front buttress also located more closely to the top. • The axis, the second neck vertebra, has a hollow at the rear of its neural spine, with three deeper pneumatic depressions in it. • The postaxial cervical vertebrae, the neck vertebrae behind the axis, have variably developed epipophyses and more subtle "pre‐epipopophyses" below the prezygapophyses, projections on the front of the ridge between the prezygapophysis and the vertebral body. • The cervical neural arches have an epipophyseal‐prezygapophyseal lamina, a horizontal ridge running from the epipophysis to the prezygapophysis, separating two pneumatocoels by dividing the usual depression at the side base of the neural spine. • In the neck vertebrae the pleurocoels are reduced to foramina, smaller openings. • In the neck vertebrae the neural spines are reduced in height and length. • The third neck vertebra has a neural spine with a transversely flattened forwardly directed process. • The anterior cervical vertebrae have three costal spurs between the tuberculum and capitulum, the heads of their ribs. • The neck rib shafts are strongly positioned below the vertebral body due to an appending parapophysis and a long section between the two rib heads. • The middle presacral neural spines, of the rear neck and front back, are divided or forked, and in the neck base and anterior dorsal vertebrae bear a median tubercle that is at least as large as the metapophyses, the prongs of the fork, resulting in a "trifid" condition. • The middle and posterior dorsal parapophyseal and diapophyseal laminae are arranged in a "K" configuration. • The presacral pneumaticity extends into the ilium, which thus is permeated by air chambers. ==Discovery and naming==
Discovery and naming
The original discovery was by a Catholic priest, Father R. Mertens, in 1913. He showed some remains he had excavated to the German mining engineer Gustav Behaghel who in 1916 sent three vertebrae to the head of the Geological Survey of China Ding Wenjiang ("V.K. Ting"). This was probably the first occasion dinosaur bones from China were scientifically studied. With help of another Catholic priest, Father Alfred Kaschel, the site was rediscovered in November 1922 by Johan Gunnar Andersson and Tan Xichou. In March 1923, the Austrian student Otto Zdansky excavated two skeletons at sites about three kilometres apart and the holotype was studied by H. C. T'an, also in 1923. The name refers to the marshy area of the finds and to truga, Swedish swamp shoes, which according to Wiman resembled the wide feet of the animal. There proved to be a plant genus (a grass) with the same generic name, Euhelopus. However, a genus in one biological kingdom may have a name that is used as a genus name in another kingdom, so Euhelopus was allowed. The type species is Helopus zdanskyi. The combinatio nova is Euhelopus zdanskyi. The specific name honours Zdansky. Both specimens are housed in the collection of the Paleontological Museum of Uppsala University, in Uppsala, Sweden, where the mounted skeletons are displayed since the 1930s. In 1923, Zdansky lacked the time to finish the excavation of the holotype. In the autumn of 1934, C. C. Young and M. N. Bien returned to the locality and recovered a left scapulocoracoid, right coracoid and right humerus. Young described these remains, as well as the vertebrae Behagel had sent to Ting, in 1935. Young assigned all of these remains to Euhelopus zdanskyi except the incomplete right coracoid, and suggested that they probably belonged to the type specimen. Yang and Bien's scapulocoracoid and humerus and Ting's vertebrae were designated "exemplar c" by Wilson & Upchurch in 2009. They were informed in 2007 that this material could no longer be located in the Chinese collections. ==Classification==
Classification
Wiman in 1929 was uncertain about the affinities of Helopus and placed it in a Helopodidae of its own. The phylogenetic affinities of Euhelopus are controversial, and it has been variously interpreted as having close affinities to Mamenchisaurus-like taxa }} ==Paleoecology==
Paleoecology
Provenance and occurrence The type material for Euhelopus was excavated at the Mengyin Formation in Shandong (Shantung) Province, China. The specimens were collected by Otto Zdansky in 1923, in green/yellow sandstone and green/yellow siltstone. The Mengyin Formation dates to the Berriasian-Valanginian. It was previously regarded as having been deposited during the Barremian or Aptian stages of the Cretaceous period, about 129 to 113 million years ago. During the 1990s it was mistakenly thought the formation might date from the Late Jurassic. ==Footnotes==
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