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Haplocanthosaurus priscus was originally named
Haplocanthus priscus by
John Bell Hatcher in 1903. Soon after his original description, Hatcher came to believe the name
Haplocanthus had already been used for a genus of
acanthodian fish (
Haplacanthus, named by
Louis Agassiz in 1845), and was thus preoccupied. Hatcher re-classified his sauropod later in 1903, giving it the new name
Haplocanthosaurus. However, the name was not technically preoccupied at all, since there was a variation in spelling: the fish was named
Haplacanthus, not
Haplocanthus. While
Haplocanthus technically remained the valid name for this dinosaur, Hatcher's mistake was not noticed until many years after the name
Haplocanthosaurus had become fixed in scientific literature. When the mistake was finally discovered, a petition was sent to the
ICZN (the body which governs scientific names in zoology), which officially discarded the name
Haplocanthus and declared
Haplocanthosaurus the official name (ICZN Opinion #1633). Originally described as a "
cetiosaurid",
José Bonaparte decided in 1999 that
Haplocanthosaurus differed enough from other sauropods to warrant its own
family, the Haplocanthosauridae.
Phylogenetic studies have failed to clarify the exact relationships of
Haplocanthosaurus with any certainty. Studies have variously found it to be more primitive than the
neosauropods, a primitive
macronarian (related to the ancestor of more advanced forms such as
Camarasaurus and the
brachiosaurids), or a very primitive
diplodocoid, more closely related to
Diplodocus than to
titanosaurs, but more primitive than
rebbachisaurids. In 2005,
Darren Naish and
Mike Taylor reviewed the various proposed positions of
Haplocanthosaurus in their study of diplodocoid phylogeny. They found it could be a non-neosauropod eusauropod, a basal macronarian, or a basal diplodocoid. In 2011, an analysis by Whitlock recovered Haplocanthosaurus as the basalmost member of the Diplodocoidea, the third potentiality of Taylor & Naish. In 2015, a specimen-level phylogenetic analysis was published, finding
Haplocanthosaurus to be a confirmed diplodocoid, either very basal, or more derived than rebbachisaurids. Their implied weighting cladogram is shown below. }} ==References==