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   » » Wiki: Elopteryx
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Elopteryx is a of based on fragmentary found in rocks of . The single , Elopteryx nopcsai, was known only from very incomplete material until new specimens were reported in the 21st century. might represent a of this taxon.


History of discovery and naming

Initial finds
In the late nineteenth or early twentieth century, the famous Franz Nopcsa von Felső-Szilvás found near Sînpetru, in what is now the Romanian region of , some bone fragments of a small theropod. These were acquired by the British Museum of Natural History. In 1913, curator Charles William Andrews named these as the Elopteryx nopcsai. The genus name Elopteryx is from helos (ἕλος), "marsh" + pteryx (πτέρυξ), "wing". The specific name honors Nopcsa. Initially, Elopteryx was described from its , a proximal left , specimen BMNH A1234. A second upper left thighbone fragment, BMNH A1235, was referred. A distal left was also tentatively assigned to this ; it was initially classified with the same specimen number as the holotype and was found in close proximity, but may not be from the same individual (see below). This has since been relabeled and is now specimen BMNH A4359. The exact location and time of the discoveries are today unknown. The fossils date from the early-late () , circa 70-66 million years ago, originating from the Sânpetru Formation of the Hațeg Island. The animal was by Andrews believed to be a .Harrison & Walker (1975)Andrews (1913)

In 1929 the Hungarian paleontologist Kálmán Lambrecht referred two more specimens: BMNH A PAL.1528 and BMNH A PAL.1588, respectively a left and a right tibiotarsus.Lambrecht, K., 1929, "Mesozoische und tertiäre Vogelreste aus Siebenbürgen" Comptes-Rendus Xe Congres International de Zoologie, Budapest, section 8, 1262-1275 In 1933 Lambrecht named a separate family Elopterygidae.Lambrecht, K., 1933, Handbuch der Palaeornithologie. Gebrüder Borntraeger, Berlin The supposed family Elopterygidae was initially placed in the – then still in the "" – in 1963 by in his fossil bird catalogue, and the genera and were moved to it.Brodkorb (1963): pp.248-249 These two are unequivocal derived birds and the latter indeed seems to be an ancient , whereas Argillornis has turned out to be referrable to the giant which was almost certainly not very closely related to the Sulae.Mayr (2008) Reconstruction attempts of E. nopcsai like this are based on this presumed affiliation with and . But more recent studies would result in radically different interpretations.


Later finds
In 1975, the distal tibiotarsi BMNH A1588 and BMNH A1528, together with BMNH A4359, were by Colin James Oliver Harrison and Cyril Alexander Walker removed from Elopteryx, redescribed as Bradycneme draculae and Heptasteornis andrewsi respectively, and used to establish a supposed family of gigantic two metre tall , the . In 1978 Brodkorb had changed his opinion after the supposed Elopteryx material was divided among three species in total, and was actually the first scholar in modern times to suggest that these bones were not of birds but of non-avian dinosaurs.Brodkorb (1978): pp.223-224

In 1981, and stated that Elopteryx was a non-avian dinosaur. They also referred a supposed distal femur (FGGUB R.351) to Elopteryx,Grigorescu, D. & Kessler, E., 1981, "A new specimen of Elopteryx nopcsai from the dinosaurian beds of Hateg Basin", Révue Roumaine de Géologie, Géophysique et Géographie, Géologie, 24: 171-175 but both researchers (with Zoltan Csiki) later identified this specimen as a distal .

In 1992, it was proposed by Jean Le Loeuff e.a. that Bradycneme and Heptasteornis should be with E. nopcsai again, and a femur (MDE-D203), an dorsal (MDE-D01), a posterior (MDE collection, unnumbered) and some dorsal fragments from the Grès à Reptiles formation of France were described as an indeterminate species of Elopteryx; that study placed all this material in the or a family or ( Elopteryginae) very close to these.Le Loeuff et al. (1992) The vertebrae were in 1998 separated again and assigned to a new dromaeosaurid, Variraptor mechinorum.Le Loeuff and Buffetaut (1998) The French femur is similar in general appearance to the Elopteryx type but it differs in diagnostic traits, e.g. lacking a fourth trochanter. Also, neither the ribs nor the tibiotarsi can be compared to the type specimen of Elopteryx, there being no overlapping material.

In 2005, another (distal) femur piece, FGGUB R.1957, has been described as a new specimen of Elopteryx on the basis of the bone texture. In 2019, a potential pelvis specimen identified as cf. E. nopcsai was reported. In 2024, a new femur specimen from was attributed to Elopteryx, and the specimen shows that it was secondarily flightless.


Phylogeny
Modern interpretations have differed on the question whether the and material should be included — they have meanwhile been synonymized and split from each other and Elopteryx many times — and what the exact affiliations of the material would be. Various solutions were proposed for this problem.E.g. Le Loeuff et al. (1992), Csiki & Grigorescu (1998) Previously, some researchers proposed Elopteryx was a member of the or ,Paul (1988), Weishampel et al. (1991) without being able to support this with much empirical evidence. In 1998 Csiki & Grigorescu suggested that Elopteryx belonged to the , while Bradycneme had a more basal position in the .Csiki & Grigorescu (1998)

Since the 21st century, Elopteryx has been supported widely as a member of the , with most studies recovering it as a member of the . In 2004, and considered Elopteryx as a , possibly either a non- birdMost of these - like or - are only known since the late 20th century. or a , while Bradycneme would be a maniraptoran, and the Heptasteornis (at least its holotype BMNH A4359) a member of the .Naish & Dyke (2004) Thus E. nopcsai seems to be some sort of birdlike eumaniraptoran, but not related to modern birds. In 2005, Kessler, Grigorescu and Csiki reunited all the material in Elopteryx but considered it an alvarezsaurid. In a 2011 classification, Tom Holtz assigned Elopteryx to the .Holtz, Thomas R. Jr. (2011) Dinosaurs: The Most Complete, Up-to-Date Encyclopedia for Dinosaur Lovers of All Ages, Winter 2010 Appendix. In 2013, Stephen L. Brusatte and colleagues mentioned a possibility of Elopteryx and the Balaur bondoc being the same taxon, though the authors did not consider it the most likely case. Later, in 2019, two studies have found it to be an once again, but a basal one; Hartman and colleagues recover it as a confuciusornithiform while Mayr and colleagues note similarities with and , suggesting they form a clade native to the Late Cretaceous European archipelago. Mayr and colleagues also claimed that the synonymy of Elopteryx and Balaur remains possible and that more work is needed for confirmation. In 2024, Stoicescu and colleagues suggested that Elopteryx is indeed a and a member of the based on its new specimen, and that Balaur bondoc is probably a of Elopteryx.


See also
  • Timeline of troodontid research


Bibliography
  • (1913): On some bird remains from the Upper Cretaceous of Transylvania. Geological Magazine 5: 193–196.
  • (1963): Catalogue of fossil birds. Part 1 (Archaeopterygiformes through Ardeiformes). Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences 7(4): 179–293. PDF fulltext
  • (1978): Catalogue of fossil birds, Part 5 (Passeriformes). Bulletin of the Florida State Museum, Biological Sciences 23(3): 139–228.
  • (1998): Small theropods from the Late Cretaceous of the Hateg Basin (western Romania) - an unexpected diversity at the top of the food chain. 1: 87-104.
  • (1975): The Bradycnemidae, a new family of owls from the Upper Cretaceous of Romania. Palaeontology 18(3): 563–570.
  • (1998): A new dromaeosaurid theropod from the Upper Cretaceous of Southern France. Oryctos 1: 105–112.
  • (1992): The first record of dromaeosaurid dinosaurs (Saurischia, Theropoda) in the Maastrichtian of southern Europe: palaeobiogeographical implications. Bulletin de la Société géologique de la France 163(3): 337–343.
  • (2008): A skull of the giant bony-toothed bird Dasornis (Aves: Pelagornithidae) from the Lower Eocene of the Isle of Sheppey. Palaeontology 51(5): 1107–1116. (HTML abstract)
  • (2004): Heptasteornis was no ornithomimid, troodontid, dromaeosaurid or owl: the first alvarezsaurid (Dinosauria: Theropoda) from Europe. Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie - Monatshefte 7: 385–401.
  • (1988): Predatory Dinosaurs of the World. New York, Simon & Schuster.
  • (1991): The dinosaurs of Transylvania. National Geographic Research and Exploration 7(2): 196–215. PDF fulltext

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