New information on the giant Devonian lobe-finned fish Edenopteron from the New South Wales south coast

Edenopteron, with a lower jaw some 48 cm long, and total length perhaps exceeding 3 m, is the largest Devonian lobe-fin known from semi-articulated remains. New material described from the type locality (Boyds Tower, south of Eden) includes three slightly smaller articulated skulls and jaws, and add...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Australian Journal of Earth Sciences
Main Authors: Young, Gavin, Dunstone, Robert, Ollerenshaw, P. J., Lu, J, Crook, B
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1885/204998
https://doi.org/10.1080/08120099.2019.1651769
https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/bitstream/1885/204998/5/01_Young_New_information_on_the_giant_2019.pdf.jpg
Description
Summary:Edenopteron, with a lower jaw some 48 cm long, and total length perhaps exceeding 3 m, is the largest Devonian lobe-fin known from semi-articulated remains. New material described from the type locality (Boyds Tower, south of Eden) includes three slightly smaller articulated skulls and jaws, and additional bones of the shoulder girdle. Another articulated skull roof, shoulder girdle and palate is described from a second locality (Hegarty Bay), about 10 km south of Boyds Tower. Both localities represent the upper part of the Worange Point Formation, of late Famennian age (uppermost Upper Devonian). The new morphological evidence supports a close relationship to the tristichopterids Mandageria and Cabonnichthys, from the slightly older (Frasnian, Upper Devonian) fossil fish assemblage at Canowindra, New South Wales. Features of the shoulder girdle (supracleithrum, anocleithrum) suggest that Edenopteron is more closely related to Mandageria than Cabonnichthys. Eight characters are used to define a tristichopterid subfamily Mandageriinae, to which Notorhizodon from the Middle Devonian of Antarctica is also referred. The Mandageriinae is endemic to East Gondwana (Australia-Antarctica). In combination with possibly the most primitive tristichopterid, Marsdenichthys from the Frasnian of Victoria, these distributions implicate East Gondwana as a likely place of origin for the entire group. This relates to the major but unresolved question of a possible Gondwana origin for all the land vertebrates (tetrapods). Excavation and preparation of the type material of Edenopteron keithcrooki was supported by Australian Research Council Discovery Grants (DP0558499 and DP0772138). Jing Lu is supported by the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences Grant No. XDB26000000, the National Natural Science Foundation of China Grant No. 41872023, and an ANU Department of Applied Mathematics Marcelja Fellowship