Ahdeskatanka

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Phylum:Chordata
Class:Reptilia
Ahdeskatanka
Temporal range: Early Eocene Wasatchian
Holotype skull
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Archosauria
Order: Crocodilia
Superfamily: Alligatoroidea
Family: Alligatoridae
Subfamily: Alligatorinae
Genus: Ahdeskatanka
Cossette & Tarailo, 2024
Type species
Ahdeskatanka russlanddeutsche
Cossette & Tarailo, 2024

Ahdeskatanka is an extinct genus of alligator from the Early Eocene Golden Valley Formation of North Dakota, USA. Ahdeskatanka had a short, rounded snout with globular teeth that are well-suited for crushing hard-shelled prey, though its exact ecology is not known. Ahdeskatanka inhabited the vast wetlands that covered much of western North Dakota during the Early Eocene Climatic Optimum, an environment it shared with at least three other crocodilians. These include the large caiman Chrysochampsa and at least two unnamed forms, one a large crocodyloid and one more similar to Ahdeskatanka. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that it was an early diverging member of the Alligatorinae, possibly related to Allognathosuchus, though its position is not very stable. Only a single species, Ahdeskatanka russlanddeutsche, is placed in this genus.

Ahdeskatanka was named in 2024 by Adam Cossette and David Tarailo based on a nearly complete skull recovered from the Early Eocene Golden Valley Formation of North Dakota, with the authors describing several additional specimens that they also referred to the genus. These remains were recovered sometime between 1958 and 1961 during a large field expedition conducted by Glenn Jepsen of Princeton University, which recovered a plethora of crocodilian remains from the White Butte and Turtle Valley sites (collectively referred to as the South Heart Locality).[1]

The name Ahdeskatanka is derived from the Dakota word "Ahdeṡkataƞka", which means "alligator". Meanwhile, the species name "russlanddeutsche" is of German origin and means "Germans from Russia". Both names were chosen to reflect the inhabitants of the lands where the fossil material was found, with peoples speaking the Dakota language having been the original inhabitants and ethnic Germans hailing from the Russian Empire having settled in North Dakota during the late 19th century.[1]

Description

Ahdeskatanka was a small-bodied alligatorine with a wide head and blunt teeth. The animal's snout alone is wider than it is long and it had an overbite like modern alligators.[1]

The external nares (nostrils) were large and faced upwards, as is typical for crocodilians. Most of the edge of the nares was formed by the premaxillae, though towards the back the nasal bones enter the opening and extend around halfway into it, separating the nares into two connected hemispheres. Though roughly circular in shape, the lateral edges of the nares are linear, which is unusual for basal alligatoroids and somewhat resembles the anatomy of Procaimanoidea utahensis (though the two differ in the other aspects of the nares). The premaxillae extend back into the space between the nasal bones and the maxillae, forming a thin and unusually long dorsal process that ends at the same level where the sixth maxillary teeth are located. The maxillae are short and wide and thus contribute to the blunt appearance of Ahdeskatanka's head. Due to how long the dorsal processes of the premaxillae are, the maxillae only contact the nasals for a very short distance, much less than what can be seen in related alligatorids. The back end of each maxilla exhibits three processes of differing length. The innermost process is the smallest, and contacts the lacrimal bone. The intermediate process extends into the space between the lacrimal and the jugal bone and the longest of the three processes extends along the lower surface of the jugal.[1]

The lower jaw of Ahdeskatanka.
Size comparison of Ahdeskatanka

The eyesockets (orbits) are teardrop-shaped and closely resemble those of Allognathosuchus wartheni, though they are proportionally larger in Ahdeskatanka. The prefrontal bone exhibits a triangular process that extends into the lacrimal right where the two bones form the edge of the eyesocket. Notably, the front tip of the prefrontal extends beyond that of the lacrimal much further than in related species. The lacrimal forms much of the pointed anterior end of the eyesocket, which gives the back of the bone the shape of an inverted V. The jugal extends almost as far forward as the lacrimal. The frontal bridges the snout with the skull table and forms the bony bridge that separates the eyesockets. Its contact with the nasal is complex and trident-shaped, with the two outer prongs being longer than the central one. On the skull table the frontal contacts both postorbital bones and the parietal bone. The contact is entirely located on the skull table and does not involve the supratemporal fenestra as is the case in some other crocodilians. Especially notable is the fact that the fronto-parietal contact is straight, whereas the suture is concave or convex in related taxa.[1]

Though the mandible is not completely known, it was likely short and robust with a tall jaw joint based on the known bones and the anatomy of the upper jaw.[1]

Dentition

Each premaxilla contains five teeth. The fourth tooth was enlarged, with the first three and the fifth being smaller and roughly equal in size. Each maxilla contains thirteen teeth, the largest of which is the fourth. Shifts in the size of the alveoli indicate that the maxillary teeth shrink and grow in size throughout the jaw. After the large fourth tooth, the maxillary alveoli grow smaller until the sixth, followed by an enlarged socket for the seventh tooth and a small eighth. Following these the alveoli once again begin to increase in size until the penultimate tooth, which has a tooth socket about twice as wide as that of the final thirteenth maxillary tooth. The distal maxillary teeth, those towards the back of the jaw, are described as blunt and approximately even in terms of the length to width ratio.[1]

The dentary teeth occlude lingual to those of the premaxillary and maxillary toothrow, meaning that much like modern alligators and unlike true crocodiles, Ahdeskatanka would have had an overbite.[1]

Phylogeny

Paleobiology

References

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