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Ruthenosaurus is an of that lived in what is now during the (late ) about 285 million years ago. It is known from the MNHN.F.MCL-1 an articulated partial . It was collected by D. Sigogneau-Russell and D. Russell in 1970 in the upper part of the M2 Member, Grès Rouge Group, in the Basin, near the village of Valady (département of ), in Occitanie Region. It was first named by Robert R. Reisz, Hillary C. Maddin, Jörg Fröbisch and Jocelyn Falconnet in 2011, and the is Ruthenosaurus russellorum.


Etymology
Ruthenosaurus is named after a regional tribe, Ruthenie (in ), that have also given Ruthénois, the name of the inhabitants of the town of ; and the sauros, "lizard". The type species is named in honour of Drs Denise Sigogneau-Russell and Donald E. Russell, the original collectors of the holotype.


Discovery
The holotype of Ruthenosaurus was discovered in the summer 1970 by the paleontologists Denise Sigogneau-Russell and Donald Eugene Russell, during a prospecting survey carried out in Permian red sandstones outcropping in on the western flank of the Cayla Hill near the commune of Valady, northwest of . An eroded vertebra picked up on the western slope of the hill led the scientists to explore the surrounding canyons, where they discovered a large articulated skeleton still in place in the sediments but damaged by erosion. The skull, neck, most of the limbs, and the tail were missing, probably destroyed by erosion. The known material includes ribs and of 18 presacrals, three sacrals, and 12 anterior caudals; incomplete and interclavicule; right badly crushed and damaged; left humerus in two pieces, shaft damaged, but proximal and distal heads well preserved; complete left and nearly complete radius; complete right , complete right , and proximal portion of right ; and the complete right overlain by vertebral column. On the southeastern flank of the same hill, but in older strata, the same team discovered the anterior part of a skeleton (including the skull) belonging to a smaller animal. This specimen was first assigned to a new species of the genus , Casea rutena. But it is now regarded as a distinct genus named , with the new combination Euromycter rutenus. The larger skeleton, found stratigraphycally 120 meters above the Euromycter level, remained largely unprepared until 2003. The few overlapping elements with Euromycter suggested that it belongs to a different taxon named Ruthenosaurus russellorum in 2011.


Description
Ruthenosaurus is diagnosed by several including dorsal vertebrae with anteriorly tilting neural spines and a diamond-shaped outline in transverse section; a first rib with robust distal head, twice that of the second sacral rib; and a short with prominent posterior process. It can be distinguished from Euromycter, from older deposits of the same locality, by the shape of the distal part of the humerus, including an ectepicondylar notch rather than a fully enclosed , the specific shape of the ulna, and the overall robustness of the specimen.

The lack of fusion of the neural arches with their respective vertebral centra and incomplete ossification of the ends of the limb elements, including the absence of an ossified on the ulna, show clearly that this specimen represents a juvenile individual. However, it is distinctly larger than the fully mature specimen of Euromycter, suggesting a very large size for adult Ruthenosaurus.


Stratigraphic range
The holotype of Ruthenosaurus was found in the uppert part of the red pelitic beds of the M2 Member, which belongs to the Grès Rouge (“Red Sandstone”) Group, a sedimentary sequence subdivided into five hectometric members (M1 to M5) localized in the western basin. Like the M1 Member that has yielded Euromycter, the deposits of the M2 Member are interpreted as a environment (or ) under a semi-arid, hot climate. The age of the Grès Rouge Group is uncertain but it is regarded as contemporaneous to the Saxonian Group of the neighbouring Lodève basin, where radiometric and magnetostratigraphic data suggested previously an age between the late (middle of the Early Permian) and the early (early Late Permian). However, new chronostratigraphic and magnetostratigraphic data for the Saxonian Group indicate an age between the (for the Rabejac Formation and the Octon Member of the Salagou Formation) and the late - and possibly early (for La Lieude Formation). A more precise stratigraphic correlation of the Permian Rodez basin with that of Lodève was proposed in 2022 by Werneburg and colleagues. In the Rodez basin, the FII Formation of the Salabru Group, underlying the Grès Rouge Group, yielded , , and a footprints assemblage equivalent to that of the Viala Formation of the Lodève basin. The lower part of the Viala Formation yielded a radiometric age of 290.96 ± 0.19 Ma corresponding to the late Sakmarian. It has also been determined that the M1 and M2 megasequences of the Rodez basin are equivalent to the Rabéjac Formation of the Lodève basin (and also of the Combret Member of the Saint-Pierre Formation of the basin in southern ). Above the Rabéjac Formation, the lower two-thirds of the Octon Member of the Salagou Formation yielded four horizons radiometrically dated. The oldest tuff horizon provided an age of 284.40 ± 0.07 Ma corresponding to the latest Artinskian. Based on this dating, the Rabéjac Formation and the correlative M1 and M2 megasequences of the Grès Rouge Group can be dated to the late Artinskian. A conclusion consistent with the magnetostratigraphy which suggests that the entire Grès Rouge Group (members M1 to M5) would have an age between the late Artinskian and the early Wordian.


Classification
The first phylogenetic analysis of the caseids containing Ruthenosaurus was made by Romano & Nicosia in 2015. In their most parsimonious analysis including nearly all caseids (to the exclusion of the very fragmentary from ), Ruthenosaurus is found very close to and most specifically to the giant Cotylorhynchus hancocki. However, Romano & Nicosia have concluded that given the large body size of the two taxa and considering the absence of cranial material for Ruthenosaurus, it is possible that their close similarity is size related.

Below the most parsimonious phylogenetic analysis published by Romano & Nicosia in 2015.

A phylogenetic analysis published in 2022 by Werneburg and colleagues suggests a possible close relationship between Ruthenosaurus and . Ruthenosaurus is also recovered as the sister taxon to a clade containing the genera Alierasaurus, Cotylorhynchus and .

Below is the cladogram published by Werneburg and colleagues in 2022.

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