MarketMeraxes
Company Profile

Meraxes

Meraxes is a genus of large carcharodontosaurid theropod dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous Huincul Formation of Patagonia, Argentina. The genus contains a single species, Meraxes gigas.

Discovery and naming
The holotype of Meraxes, MMCh-PV 65, was discovered in 2012. Known from a nearly complete skull, pectoral and pelvic elements, partial forelimbs, complete hindlimbs, fragmentary ribs and cervical and dorsal vertebrae, a sacrum, and several complete caudal vertebrae, it represents the most complete carcharodontosaurid skeleton known from the Southern Hemisphere. Meraxes gigas was described in 2022 by Canale et al. based on these remains. The generic name, "Meraxes", honors a female dragon ridden by Queen Rhaenys Targaryen in the George R. R. Martin novel series, A Song of Ice and Fire. The specific name, "gigas", means "giant" in Greek, in reference to its large size. == Description ==
Description
The holotype of Meraxes was estimated to weigh approximately . Its skull is long, similar to that of Acrocanthosaurus, which has a skull length of . The shapes and proportions of various bones, including the skull, scapula, metacarpals, ischial shaft, and foot, indicate that Meraxes and Acrocanthosaurus had similar proportions and body size. Meraxes possessed reduced forelimbs, an instance of convergent evolution that occurred independently in four different lineages: Carcharodontosauridae, Abelisauridae, Tyrannosauridae, and Alvarezsauridae. Additionally, the second toes possess an enlarged claw, almost twice as long as the claw on the fourth toe. ==Paleobiology==
Paleobiology
Osteohistological analysis of the holotype suggests the individual could have been between 39 and 53 years old when it died, having reached skeletal maturity approximately 4 years prior to its death (between 35 and 49 years old). This would make it among the longest-lived non-avian theropods currently known. Meraxes was determined to have grown to a large size by extending its growth period (hypermorphosis), rather than increasing its relative growth rate (acceleration) through development as in Tyrannosaurus, to which it was compared. == Classification ==
Classification
Canale et al. (2022) recovered Meraxes as the earliest diverging member of the tribe Giganotosaurini within the Carcharodontosauridae. The results of their phylogenetic analyses are displayed in the cladogram below: }} }} == Paleoenvironment ==
Paleoenvironment
(Meraxes in dark blue, left)| alt=Silhouettes of dinosaurs from the Huincul Formation as size comparison The fossil remains of Meraxes were recovered from the Huincul Formation. A substantial number of taxa are known to have inhabited this paleoenvironment. Theropods from the formation include the paravian Overoraptor, the elaphrosaurine Huinculsaurus, the abelisaurs Skorpiovenator, Tralkasaurus, and Ilokelesia, the megaraptoran Aoniraptor, and the fellow giant carcharodontosaurids Mapusaurus and Taurovenator. Meraxes was found in an older rock layer than either Mapusaurus and Taurovenator, so it is unlikely they coexisted. The herbivores of the area are represented by the rebbachisaurid sauropods Cathartesaura and Limaysaurus, the titanosaurs Argentinosaurus, Choconsaurus, and Chucarosaurus, and indeterminate iguanodonts. == References ==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com