Taxonomy, systematics, and diversity of the European oldest testudinids
Author
Adán Ṕerez-Garćia
Author
Francisco Ortega
Author
Emiliano Jiménez Fuentes
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2016
177
648
675
journal article
10.1111/zoj.12381
d73105df-ed15-4fed-8798-0e9b473a114a
270304
PELOROCHELON
GEN. NOV.
(
FIGS 2
,
3
,
4
,
5
,
6
E, F, G, H)
Type
species.
Pelorochelon soriana
sp. nov.
Other included species.
Pelorochelon eocaenica
(
Hummel, 1935
)
.
Etymology. Peloro
-, meaning monstrous and gigantic in Greek, because it is the European oldest known testudinid with a shell of more than
50 cm
, and the largest testudinid in the European Eocene record; and -
chelon
, from the ancient Greek word χελώνη (cheloni), which means turtle or tortoise.
Distribution.
Eocene (Ypresian to Bartonian) of Europe.
Diagnosis.
Western European Cenozoic testudinid, with the length of the shell close to
70 cm
, differing from all the medium and large European testudinids by the presence of a well-developed visceral elevation in the lateral margin of the epiplastra, expanded toward the anterior region, and characterized by a unique character combination: shallow notch in the anterior carapace margin; slightly wider than long nuchal; eight to nine neurals; first suprapygal embrassing the lenticular second one; dorsally directed distal margins of the anterior and posterior peripherals; absence of pointed tips in the anterior and posterior carapacial rim; posterior carapace margin not undulating; presence of a cervical scute; cervical almost as wide as long; markedly divergent latero-posterior margins of the first vertebral scute; third vertebral longer than wide; first pair of pleurals not overlapping the nuchal; third pleural contacting the seventh to ninth pair of marginals; medial margins of the marginals not contacting the costo-peripheral suture; second marginals not contacting the nuchal; fourth marginals medially in contact with the first pleurals; presence of twelve pairs of marginals; overlap of the twelfth marginals on the second suprapygal; anterior plastral lobe as long as the posterior one; medially notched anterior plastral lobe; concave dorsal lip of the epiplastra; presence of gular protrusions; absence of gular pocket; absence of step-like morphology behind the epiplastral lip; epiplastra as long as wide; sutured contact between all plastral plates; gular scutes not contacting or not overlying the anterior region of the entoplastron; anterior angle between the sagittal axis and the gularo-humeral sulcus of 65° or more obtuse; humero-pectoral sulcus generally perpendicular to the axial plane in the medial area, with a well-developed lateral change of curvature.