Basic info Taxonomic history Classification Included Taxa
Morphology Ecology and taphonomy External Literature Search Age range and collections

Neuquensaurus australis

Reptilia - Saltasauridae

Taxonomy
Titanosaurus australis was named by Lydekker (1893). Its type specimen is MLP Ly 1-6 (= MLP 77-V-28-1), a set of postcrania, and it is a 3D body fossil. Its type locality is Sierra Roca, Río Neuquen, which is in a Santonian terrestrial sandstone in the Bajo de la Carpa Formation of Argentina.

It was recombined as Saltasaurus australis by McIntosh (1990); it was recombined as Neuquensaurus australis by Powell (1986), Powell (1992), Salgado and Calvo (1993), Perea and Ubilla (1994), Bonaparte (1996), Mones (1997), Novas (1997), Salgado et al. (1997), Salgado and Azpilicueta (2000), Salgado and García (2002), Wilson and Upchurch (2003), Salgado (2003), Calvo and González Riga (2003), Powell (2003), Upchurch et al. (2004), Salgado and Coria (2005), Apesteguía (2005), Apesteguía (2005), Kellner et al. (2005), Salgado et al. (2005), Wilson (2006), Kellner et al. (2006), Molnar and Wiffen (2007), Soto et al. (2008), Filippi and Garrido (2008), Salgado and Coria (2009), González Riga et al. (2009), Otero (2010), D'Emic and Wilson (2011), D'Emic et al. (2011), Ibiricu et al. (2011), Molnar (2011), Filippi et al. (2011), Navarrete et al. (2011), Vila et al. (2012), Candeiro and Harris (2012), Mannion and Otero (2012), Díez Díaz et al. (2013), Poropat (2013), Otero and Reguero (2013), González Riga and Ortiz David (2014), Zurriaguz and Powell (2015), de Jesus Faria et al. (2015), García et al. (2015), Zurriaguz et al. (2017), Silva Junior et al. (2017), Averianov and Sues (2017), Gorscak et al. (2017), Wilson et al. (2019), Páramo et al. (2020), Apesteguía et al. (2021), Navarro et al. (2022) and Tomaselli et al. (2022).

Synonyms
Synonymy list
YearName and author
1893Titanosaurus australis Lydekker p. 3–8
1896Titanosaurus australis Ameghino p. 89
1897Titanosaurus australis Ameghino p. 409
1900Titanosaurus australis Ameghino p. 216
1901Titanosaurus australis Nopcsa p. 207
1924Titanosaurus australis Das Gupta p. 164
1927Titanosaurus australis Huene p. 256
1927Loricosaurus scutulatus Huene p. 257
1927Titanosaurus australis Huene p. 470 figs. Pl. 16
1928Titanosaurus australis Haughton p. 74
1929Titanosaurus australis Huene p. 23
1929Loricosaurus scutatus Huene p. 151
1929Titanosaurus australis Huene p. 495
1931Loricosaurus scutatus Huene p. 187
1931Titanosaurus australis Huene p. 188
1932Titanosaurus australis Stromer p. 4
1933Titanosaurus australis Rusconi p. 9
1939Titanosaurus australis Kuhn p. 88
1940Titanosaurus australis Lambert p. 22
1941Titanosaurus australis Lambert p. 55
1942Titanosaurus australis Hoffet p. 54
1942Titanosaurus australis Lambert p. 575
1945Titanosaurus australis Serra p. 21
1947Titanosaurus australis Swinton p. 114
1964Loricosaurus scutatus Kuhn p. 48
1970Titanosaurus australis Steel p. 77
1972Titanosaurus australis Mones p. 29
1976Titanosaurus australis Russell et al.
1977Loricosaurus scutatus Taquet p. 328
1978Titanosaurus australis Bonaparte p. 555
1978Loricosaurus scutatus Bonaparte p. 572
1979Titanosaurus australis Bonaparte p. 231
1979Titanosaurus australis Bonaparte and Gasparini pp. 396-397
1980Loricosaurus scutatus Bonaparte and Powell p. 26
1980Titanosaurus australis Bonaparte and Powell p. 26
1980Titanosaurus australis Kues et al. p. 868
1980Loricosaurus scutatus Molnar p. 82
1984Loricosaurus scutatus Bonaparte p. 139
1984Titanosaurus australis Bonaparte p. 139
1986Loricosaurus scutatus Bonaparte p. 88
1986Titanosaurus australis Mourier et al. p. 173
1986Neuquensaurus australis Powell p. 81
1987Titanosaurus australis Casanovas et al. p. 100
1987Loricosaurus scutatus Molnar and Frey p. 34
1990Titanosaurus australis Buffetaut et al. p. 190
1990Saltasaurus australis McIntosh p. 395
1992Neuquensaurus australis Powell pp. 199-200
1993Titanosaurus australis Bertini et al. p. 89
1993Neuquensaurus australis Salgado and Calvo p. 217 fig. 3
1994Neuquensaurus australis Perea and Ubilla p. 13
1996Neuquensaurus australis Bonaparte pp. 105-106 fig. 39
1996Loricosaurus scutatus Gasparini et al. p. 591
1997Neuquensaurus australis Mones p. 212
1997Neuquensaurus australis Novas p. 684
1997Neuquensaurus australis Salgado et al. p. 5
2000Neuquensaurus australis Salgado and Azpilicueta p. 259
2002Neuquensaurus australis Salgado and García p. 215
2003Neuquensaurus australis Calvo and González Riga
2003Loricosaurus scutatus Malkani p. 86
2003Neuquensaurus australis Powell p. 39
2003Neuquensaurus australis Salgado p. 442
2003Neuquensaurus australis Wilson and Upchurch p. 140
2004Titanosaurus australis Goso Aguilar and Perea p. 162
2004Neuquensaurus australis Upchurch et al. p. 270
2005Neuquensaurus australis Apesteguía p. 250
2005Neuquensaurus australis Kellner et al. p. 536
2005Neuquensaurus australis Salgado et al. p. 625
2005Neuquensaurus australis Salgado and Coria p. 440
2006Neuquensaurus australis Kellner et al. p. 2
2006Neuquensaurus australis Wilson p. 177
2007Neuquensaurus australis Molnar and Wiffen p. 508
2008Neuquensaurus australis Filippi and Garrido p. 587
2008Neuquensaurus australis Soto et al. p. 16
2009Neuquensaurus australis González Riga et al. p. 141
2009Neuquensaurus australis Salgado and Coria p. 5
2010Neuquensaurus australis Otero p. 401
2011Neuquensaurus australis D'Emic and Wilson p. 64
2011Neuquensaurus australis Filippi et al. p. 6
2011Neuquensaurus australis Ibiricu et al. p. 347
2011Neuquensaurus australis Molnar p. 335
2011Neuquensaurus australis Navarrete et al. p. 9
2012Neuquensaurus australis Candeiro and Harris p. 74
2012Neuquensaurus australis Mannion and Otero p. 634
2012Neuquensaurus australis Vila et al. p. 29
2013Neuquensaurus australis Díez Díaz et al. p. 146
2013Neuquensaurus australis Otero and Reguero p. 12
2013Neuquensaurus australis Poropat p. 112
2014Neuquensaurus australis González Riga and Ortiz David p. 3
2015Neuquensaurus australis García et al. p. 45
2015Neuquensaurus australis Zurriaguz and Powell p. 283
2015Neuquensaurus australis de Jesus Faria et al. p. 157
2017Neuquensaurus australis Averianov and Sues p. 193
2017Neuquensaurus australis Gorscak et al. p. 13
2017Neuquensaurus australis Silva Junior et al. p. 21
2017Neuquensaurus australis Zurriaguz et al. p. 101
2019Neuquensaurus australis Wilson et al. p. 21
2020Neuquensaurus australis Páramo et al. p. 370
2021Neuquensaurus australis Apesteguía et al.
2022Neuquensaurus australis Navarro et al. p. 327
2022Neuquensaurus australis Tomaselli et al. p. 14

Is something missing? Join the Paleobiology Database and enter the data

RankNameAuthor
kingdomAnimalia()
Bilateria
EubilateriaAx 1987
Deuterostomia
phylumChordataHaeckel 1874
subphylumVertebrata
superclassGnathostomata
Osteichthyes()
subclassSarcopterygii()
subclassDipnotetrapodomorpha(Nelson 2006)
subclassTetrapodomorpha()
Tetrapoda
Reptiliomorpha
Anthracosauria
subclassAmphibiosauriaKuhn 1967
Cotylosauria()
Amniota
Sauropsida
classReptilia
subclassEureptilia()
Romeriida
Diapsida()
Archosauromorpha(Huene 1946)
Crocopoda
RankNameAuthor
ArchosauriformesGauthier 1986
Eucrocopoda
Archosauria()
informalAvemetatarsalia
Ornithodira
Dinosauromorpha
Dinosauriformes
Dinosauria()
Saurischia()
Sauropoda()
Gravisauria
Eusauropoda
Neosauropoda
Macronaria
Titanosauriformes
Titanosauria
Lithostrotia
superfamilySaltasauroideaPowell 1992
familySaltasauridae
subfamilySaltasaurinae
tribeSaltasauriniSalgado and Bonaparte 2007
genusNeuquensaurus
speciesaustralis()

If no rank is listed, the taxon is considered an unranked clade in modern classifications. Ranks may be repeated or presented in the wrong order because authors working on different parts of the classification may disagree about how to rank taxa.

Neuquensaurus australis Lydekker 1893
show all | hide all
Invalid names: Loricosaurus scutatus Huene 1927 [synonym]
Diagnosis
ReferenceDiagnosis
J. E. Powell 2003Titanosaurids of small and medium size similar to Saltasaurus loricatus. Cervical centra short and broad. Short dorsal centra with reduced pleurocoels. Sacrum with six well coossified centra, narrow from the second to the fifth sacral vertebrae. First caudal vertebra biconvex. Caudal central rather short and with a very concave ventral face bounded by rounded edges. Scapula with a prominent muscular attachment on the medial face, near the dorsal edge, as in Saltasaurus loricatus. Sternal plate with a very prominent ventral crest. Limb bones rather short, but more slender than in Saltasaurus loricatus. Radius of sigmoid outline. Short and stout metacarpals. Ilium with preacetabular lamina laterally expanded, but somewhat shorter than in Saltasaurus. Fibula with simple but well developed lateral tuberosity. Astragalus transversely short.
M. D. D'Emic and J. A. Wilson 2011Titanosaur sauropod with the following unique features of the holotype: length of sacral vertebral column about 1.5 times the width between the sacricostal yokes; sacral centra 4 and 5 less than half of the width of the last sacral centrum; seven sacral vertebrae (Powell 1986; Salgado et al. 2005). Referral of other remains held in the Museo Cinco Saltos (MCS−5) allows emendation of the diagnosis to include features present in other parts of the skeleton than are preserved in the holotype. Diagnostic features of the middle caudal vertebrae include: prezygapophyses with a nonarticulating anterior process, longitudinal ridge below transverse processes, podl present and elongate. Diagnostic features of the crus include: a fibula that is rotated anteromedially and translated slightly posteriorly so that the lateral trochanter is visible in anterior view (i.e., when the distal tibia is oriented transversely). Other features listed by Powell (1986) and Salgado et al. (2005) are now known to have a wider distribution within Titanosauria (see “Diagnostic features of Neuquensaurus australis” below).