A NEW SPERM WHALE OCCURRENCE FROM THE MIOCENE OF SOUTHERN ITALY: DIGITAL IMAGING AND RETRODEFORMATION AS TOOLS FOR THE SYSTEMATIC STUDY OF A BASAL PHYSETEROID

Here we report on the discovery of a new sperm whale (Cetacea: Odontoceti: Physeteroidea) specimen from the Pietra leccese, a Miocene calcareous formation exposed in Salento Peninsula (southern Italy) and widely known for its abundance of fossil marine vertebrates. This partial skeleton, kept at the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Emanuele PERI, Alberto COLLARETA, Giacomo ARINGHIERI, Davide CARAMELLA, Giovanni BIANUCCI
Other Authors: Rossi V., Fanti F., Barbieri G., Cavalazzi B., Scarponi D., Peri, Emanuele, Collareta, Alberto, Aringhieri, Giacomo, Caramella, Davide, Bianucci, Giovanni
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna 2021
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11568/1117360
Description
Summary:Here we report on the discovery of a new sperm whale (Cetacea: Odontoceti: Physeteroidea) specimen from the Pietra leccese, a Miocene calcareous formation exposed in Salento Peninsula (southern Italy) and widely known for its abundance of fossil marine vertebrates. This partial skeleton, kept at the Museo di Storia Naturale dell’Università di Pisa (MSNUP) with accession number MSNUP I-17604, was found inside six quarry slabs. It displays a significant degree of dorsoventral diagenetic compression; furthermore, it is still partially entombed within the host rock. These issues led us to pursue the imaging of this specimen via computed tomography (CT). Our main goal was to obtain a digital model of the fossil that could be retrodeformed for adequately serving the systematic study of this remarkable specimen. The CT-scan was performed at the Cisanello University Hospital (Pisa, Italy), and the resulting data were imported in the open-source platform 3D Slicer, where we manually segmented the fossil bones. In order to retrodeform the skull of MSNUP I-17604, we imported the mesh obtained from the CT-scan within the open-source platform Blender and we scaled the model to reverse the effects of diagenetic compression. As a proxy, we used the foramen magnum, which we assumed having a circular shape originally. We substantiated this assumption by measuring the height and transverse width of the foramen magnum in several extant and fossil specimens of toothed whales, including various members of Physeteroidea. The CT-scan revealed that MSNUP I17604 includes an incomplete cranium, a partial mandibular ramus, two detached teeth and two vertebrae that are still embedded within the calcareous matrix, plus five detached and fully prepared teeth. Despite the presence of a hard entombing rock and conspicuous diagenetic deformation, we obtained a digital 3D model of the skull with a good level of detail. A preliminary analysis of the retrodeformed model allows for observing that MSNUP I-17604 is a longirostrine sperm whale that ...