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   » » Wiki: Meyerasaurus
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Meyerasaurus is an of known from the of , Baden-Württemberg in southwestern .


Discovery
Between Holzmaden and Zell unter Aichelberg, a chalkstone and shale quarry was operated. It intersected an extremely hard forty centimetres thick layer of Stinkstein chalk, which was deemed worthless. Even ichthyosaur "mummies" present in the layer were discarded as it was not cost-effective to prepare them. The rocks were dumped in a ravine. In May 1906, the famous fossil trader discovered in the dump broken-up boulders containing an uniquely complete and thus very rare plesiosaur skeleton. Up till that time, German plesiosaurs finds had tended to be much more fragmentary than British discoveries. Over nine months he recovered 2.5 tonnes of chalkstone, exposing and preparing the bones. Together with a second plesiosaurian skeleton, discovered nearby in shale in November 1906, much later referred to , it was offered for sale. Financial support by D. Landauer and Victor Fraas allowed the Stuttgarter Königliche Naturalienkabinett to obtain both specimens.


Naming
In 1910 , the paleontology curator of the Stuttgart institution, named the specimen as victor. This name was mentioned on page 106 of the describing article. The heading of the description section on page 124 reads "Plesiosaurus (Thaumatosaurus) victor n. sp." which has been interpreted as his naming a Plesiosaurus victor coinciding with an immediate renaming into a Thaumatosaurus victor. Fraas, after explaining that he preferred Thaumatosaurus ("wonder reptile") Meyer over Seeley, states "I name our new species Thaumatosaurus victor".The combination Plesiosaurus victor as such is absent from the article text. The specific name victor, "winner" in , refers to the specimen being a "magnificent and all previous discoveries in beauty exceeding find" but also explicitly honours E. Fraas's brother Victor Fraas.

Already by 1922, it was recognised that the type material of Thaumatosaurus oolithicus was very poor. In 1932, T. victor was renamed as a species of Zittel, K.A. von. 1932. Textbook of palaeontology (three volumes), 2nd edn (revised) and in 1960 by Lambert Beverly Tarlo as victor. However, these names were rarely used. In 2007, Adam Stuart Smith announced that he would shortly name a separate genus for the taxon as Thaumatosaurus was basically a .

Meyerasaurus was first named by Adam S. Smith and Peggy Vincent in 2010 and the is Meyerasaurus victor. The generic name honors the German palaeontologist Hermann von Meyer for proposing the generic name Thaumatosaurus.


Description
Meyerasaurus is known from the SMNS 12478, an articulated and complete which preserves the , exposed in view. It has a skull length of and a body length of . It was collected from the Harpoceras elegantulum-falciferum ammonoid subzones, Harpoceras falcifer zone, of the famous Posidonien-Schiefer lagerstätte (), dating to the early stage of the , about 183-180 million years ago.

In 1944, Stuttgart was repeatedly bombed. On 12 September, British bombers caused a firestorm that burnt the inner city. The museum was destroyed and the holotype smashed to pieces. However, this allowed to painstakingly salvage these from under the rubble and put it together again. It is now displayed in the new paleontology exhibition building, the Museum am Löwentor.


Classification
The below shows Meyerasaurus phylogenetic position among other plesiosaurs, following Benson et al. (2012).


See also
  • List of plesiosaur genera
  • Timeline of plesiosaur research

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