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1 June 2009 Charting the Late Cretaceous Seas: Mosasaur Richness and Morphological Diversification
Marcus R. Ross
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Abstract

Abundant, readily identifiable, and biostratigraphically resolved specimens make mosasaurs ideal candidates to test fluxes in generic richness and morphological trends among marine vertebrates during the late Cretaceous. More than 1800 globally distributed mosasaur specimens are allocated to fifteen substage-level stratigraphically correlated assemblages. These data are quantitatively analyzed to illuminate trends within the group. Following their first appearance in the Cenomanian, mosasaurs experienced a significant radiation in the Coniacian and Santonian. Richness levels continued increasing into the Maastrichtian while mosasaurs incrementally exploited new predatory niches recognized via accumulation of novel dental morphologies. Their extinction at the end of the Cretaceous occurred at the zenith of mosasaur morphological and ecological diversity.

© 2009 by the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology
Marcus R. Ross "Charting the Late Cretaceous Seas: Mosasaur Richness and Morphological Diversification," Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 29(2), 409-416, (1 June 2009). https://doi.org/10.1671/039.029.0212
Received: 15 November 2006; Accepted: 1 August 2008; Published: 1 June 2009
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