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Thursday, May 12, 2011

Acanthopholis

Dinosaur Discovery Chronicles: Around 1865 commercial fossil collector John Griffiths found some dinosaurian remains, including osteoderms. In 1867 Huxley named the genus and species Acanthopholis horridus.


Acanthopholis ( meaning "spiny scales") is a genus of ankylosaurian dinosaur in the family Nodosauridae that lived during the Early Cretaceous Period of England.

Around 1865 commercial fossil collector John Griffiths found some dinosaurian remains, including osteoderms, at the shoreline near Folkestone in Kent, which he sold to the metallurgist Dr. John Percy. Percy brought them to the attention of Thomas Henry Huxley, who paid Griffiths to dig up all fossils he could find at the site. Despite being hampered by the fact that it was located between the tidemarks, he managed to uncover several additional bones and parts of the body armour.

In 1867 Huxley named the genus and species Acanthopholis horridus. The dinosaur's generic name refers to its armour, being derived from Greek ακανθα akantha meaning 'spine' or 'thorn' and φόλις pholis meaning 'scale'. The specific name horridus means 'frightening' or 'rough' in Latin. Arthur Smith Woodward emended the species name to Acanthopholis horrida in 1890 because pholis is feminine.

The type specimens, cotypes GSM 109045-GSM 109058, were found in the Cambridge Greensand, a formation itself dating to the Albian to Cenomanian stages around 100 million years ago, but containing reworked material from much older stages. The specimens consist of three teeth, a basicranium, a dorsal vertebra, spikes and scutes.

In 1869 Harry Govier Seeley named several new species of the genus: Acanthopholis macrocercus, based on specimens SMC B55599-55609; Acanthopholis platypus (SMC B55454, SMC B55455-55460); Acanthopholis stereocercus (SMC B5558-55560, B55562, B55566-55568, B55569) and Acanthopholis eucercus (SMC 55551-SMC 55557).

In 1878 Seeley named Acanthopholis tanyspondylus which he would rename Eucercosaurus tanyspondylus in 1879. That same year Seeley split the material of Acanthopholis stereocercus and based a new species of Anoplosaurus on part of it: Anoplosaurus major.

In 1902 however Franz Nopcsa changed it into another species of Acanthopholis: Acanthopholis major. Nopcsa at the same time renamed Anoplosaurus curtonotus into Acanthopholis curtonotus. In 1879 Seeley named the genus Syngonosaurus based on part of the type material of A. macrocercus. In 1956 Friedrich von Huene renamed A. platypus into Macrurosaurus platypus.

In 1999 Xabier Pereda-Superbiola and Paul M. Barrett reviewed all Acanthopholis material. They concluded that all species were nomina dubia: invalid names based on types which were not distinctive beyond being nodosaurid in origin. The bones of the specimens are disarticulated and often fragmentary; of some it is highly doubtful whether they are even ankylosaurian. They also found two previously unpublished names which Seeley had used to label museum specimens: "Acanthopholis hughesii" indicated SMC B55463-55490 and "Acanthopholis keepingi" SMC B55491-55526. Both names were not proposed by them as new species and are nomina nuda.

Acanthopholis's armour consisted of oval keeled plates set almost horizontally into the skin, with long spikes protruding from the neck and shoulder area, along the spine. Acanthopholis was quadrupedal and herbivorous. Its size has been estimated to be in the range of 3 to 5.5 meters (10 to 18 ft) long and approximately 380 kilograms (840 lb) in weight.

Acanthopholis was originally assigned to the Scelidosauridae by Huxley. In 1923 Nopcsa created a separate family Acanthopholidae. Today Acanthopholis is considered a member of the Nodosauridae within the Ankylosauria.

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