in Woodland Park, Colorado
Plioplatecarpus has been found in many locations around the world (most mosasaurs were fairly widespread).
Plioplatecarpus has been found in the
Pierre Shale of
Kansas,
Demopolis Chalk of
Alabama, and also in
Mississippi,
Tennessee,
North Dakota,
South Dakota,
Canada,
Sweden, and the
Netherlands. It was first found in
Europe by
paleontologist Louis Dollo (
P. marshi), in 1882. It was relatively incomplete, but more
fossils would soon turn up. In
North America,
Edward Drinker Cope found another mosasaur in 1869, but had identified it as
Mosasaurus. It would later be reclassified as
Plioplatecarpus, as would Cope's
Liodon, in 1870.
Liodon would be reclassified as
Platecarpus, and later as
Prognathodon or this genus.
Possible freshwater occurrence In 1999, Holmes and colleagues described an incomplete specimen of
Plioplatecarpus from an early
Maastrichtian non-marine deposit, suggesting that this genus might have entered freshwater and estuarine habitats. While the describers of
Pannoniasaurus considered this specimen as a random occurrence in a freshwater environment, Taylor and colleagues in 2021 suggested that this specimen and
Pannoniasaurus directly support that mosasaurs lived in both marine and freshwater habitats. ==Description==