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Kaikaifilu

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Kingdom
  
Superfamily
  
Species
  
†K. hervei

Order
  
Scaled reptiles

Class
  
Reptilia

Family
  
†Mosasauridae

Phylum
  
Chordata

Kaikaifilu wwwsciencecodexcomfilesKaikaifiluJPG

Genus
  
†KaikaifiluOtero et al., 2016

Similar
  
Scaled reptiles, Taniwhasaurus, Mosasaur, Tylosaurus

Kaikaifilu


Kaikaifilu is a genus of tylosaurine mosasaur from the Late Cretaceous of Antarctica, just before the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event. It is among the largest members of the tylosaurines, a group of marine lizards that lived during the Cretaceous.

Contents

Kaikaifilu Antarctica was home to the Mosasaur sea monster 66 million years ago

Description

Kaikaifilu Peat bog reveals more than 1000 years of Tanzanian history

The preserved portions of the skull in the holotype of Kaikaifilu total about 0.7 metres (2.3 ft) in length, suggesting a total skull length of about 1.1–1.2 metres (3.6–3.9 ft). This is larger than other contemporary mosasaurs, including Taniwhasaurus antarcticus, which has a skull length of 0.65 metres (2.1 ft). The sutures in the skull are fused, the ectepicondyle and entepycondyle (ridges on the humerus that provide muscle attachment sites) are well-developed, and the internal texture of the bone is relatively dense, suggesting that this individual was an adult.

Kaikaifilu A giant predatory lizard swam in Antarctic seas near the end of the

Asides from its size, a unique combination of other traits distinguish Kaikaifilu from its relatives. There is a prominent ridge in front of the top margin of the eye socket, and there is also a ridge between the two nostrils (unlike Taniwhasaurus). The shape of the frontal bone also differs from that of Moanasaurus and Rikisaurus; additionally, the width of the skull contracts in front of the eye socket, and the head of the humerus is vertically very thick.

Notably, the teeth of Kaikaifilu are heterodont, meaning that there is more than one distinct type of teeth: medium-sized conical teeth without any wear facets; medium-sized conical teeth with two or three wear facets on their outside and inside surfaces; very large conical teeth without any wear facets; and small, relatively blunt teeth with D-shaped cross-sections and soft enamel (which probably represent growing teeth). The only other heterodont mosasaur known is Eremiasaurus.

Discovery and naming

Kaikaifilu Species New to Science Paleontology 2017 Kaikaifilu hervei A

In January 2011, the Chilean Paleontological Expedition collected a large mosasaur skull, associated jaw fragments, a partial humerus, and about 30 isolated teeth from the upper layers of the Lopez de Bertodano Formation on Seymour Island, Antarctica. The specimen, catalogued as SGO.PV.6509, was found in rocks dating to the late Maastrichtian epoch, about 200 metres (660 ft) below the boundary between the Cretaceous and the Paleogene.

Kaikaifilu Species New to Science Paleontology 2017 Kaikaifilu hervei A

Unlike other remains of vertebrates found on Seymour Island, the fossils had a yellowish color, suggesting that the minerals in the specimen had been consistently altered. By the time the specimen was found, it was badly weathered, and the skull, which was preserved right-side-up, was split into several blocks. Several parts of the skull are only present as casts.

The specimen was named Kaikaifilu hervei in honour of "Kai-Kai filú" (a reptilian ocean deity in the cosmology of the Mapuche people) and Dr. Francisco Hervé (a Chilean geologist who has contributed significantly to the study of Chilean and Antarctic geology).

Classification

Several phylogenetic analyses were conducted in 2016 to determine the relationships of Kaikaifilu. All of them showed that it was closely related to Tylosaurus and Taniwhasaurus in the Tylosaurinae. The results of one of four analyses conducted are shown below in a phylogenetic tree.

Paleobiology

Previously-identified mosasaur genera from the Lopez de Bertodano Formation include Mosasaurus, Prognathodon, Plioplatecarpus, Moanasaurus, and Leiodon. However, since they were based on teeth, some of which match the tooth morphologies found in Kaikaifilu, it is very possible that not all of these genera were actually present. Kaikaifilu also lived alongside the aristonectine plesiosaur Aristonectes.

References

Kaikaifilu Wikipedia