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Jingiella

  • Jan 26
  • 3 min read

MEANING: Jing

PERIOD: Late Jurassic

CONTINENT: Asia


Jingiella is a mamenchisaurid sauropod dinosaur from the Late Jurassic of what is now China. Mamenchisaurids are known for their necks being among the longest in proportion to body-length, even compared to other sauropods. Like all sauropods, Jingiella walked on four pillar-like legs and subsisted on a herbivorous diet.


Jingiella

Abstract from paper: A new mamenchisaurid sauropod dinosaur, Jingia dongxingensis gen. et sp. nov. from the Upper Jurassic of Southernmost China is reported here. The holotype consists of partly preserved dorsal, sacral, and caudal vertebrae, left and right ulna, and right femur. Anatomical comparison and phylogenetic analysis indicate that the new taxon belongs to Mamenchisauridae and bears a unique combination of characteristics, such as the ratio of the length of the neural spine to the narrowest width of the neural arch of the dorsal vertebra is about 4.4; sacral centrum is opisthocoelous with shallow depression exists on the lateral surface; centrum of anterior caudal vertebrae are amphicoelous, and the articular surfaces are transversely compressed; the anterolateral and anteromedial processes of the ulna are generally perpendicular in proximal view. Phylogenetically, Jingia dongxingensis gen. et sp. nov. is located at the later diverged position in Mamenchisauridae. This discovery increases the diversity of Mamenchisauridae and provides additional information to help understand the evolutionary radiation of eusauropods in China. It also indicates that this lineage is more competitive than penecontemporaneous neosauropods to dominate the Late Jurassic of East Asia.



Jingiella is from the Late Jurassic. The Late Jurassic was a dynamic period, spanning from about 162 to 143 million years ago. The continents were continuing to drift apart, and the supercontinent Pangaea had fully split into Laurasia in the north and Gondwana in the south. This continental rearrangement led to the formation of large inland seas and shallow coastlines that fostered diverse ecosystems. The climate during the Late Jurassic was warm and humid, with lush forests of conifers and ferns that stretched across much of the continents, creating a rich ecosystem where dinosaurs flourished the dominant land animals.


Dinosaurs continued to diversify through the Late Jurassic, with some of the most famous species evolving in this time. Many well-known sauropods, such as Brachiosaurus and Apatosaurus roamed the land, exhibiting niche partitioning with their selectively distinct neck positions. Alongside them, stegosaurs became widespread, their plates and spikes making them one of the era's most recognizable groups. Theropods like Allosaurus and Ceratosaurus were the apex predators, evolving large, powerful bodies and sharp teeth that allowed them to hunt the gigantic herbivores. The early evolution of birds was taking place, setting the stage for the numerous species that would fill the skies in the eras to come.


Unlike the dramatic mass extinctions that marked the beginning and end of the Mesozoic, the Jurassic Period ended without a sharp boundary. As the continents continued to drift, ecosystems gradually transformed into unique habitats that supported the more specialized dinosaur species of the Cretaceous.

Late Jurassic

Jingiella is a mamenchisaurid. Mamenchisauridae is a distinctive group of sauropod dinosaurs best known for their incredibly long necks, which proportionally outstretched those of nearly any other dinosaur. This clade is primarily known from the Jurassic Period of Asia, particularly China, where several well-preserved fossils have been discovered. Mamenchisaurids are unique for evolving some of the most extreme neck elongation seen in any terrestrial vertebrate, sometimes accounting for over half their total body length. Despite these massive necks, their bodies were relatively compact and lightly built compared to other long-necked sauropods.


Fossil evidence suggests that mamenchisaurids were relatively slow-moving, ground-feeding herbivores that relied on their extended necks to reach broad swaths of vegetation without needing to move their entire bodies. The structure of their cervical vertebrae shows adaptations for both strength and flexibility, likely allowing them to sweep their necks laterally across the landscape in search of low-lying plants. Though most commonly associated with the Late Jurassic of China, possible members of the group have also been found in Thailand, Africa, and even as far as South America, hinting at a wider geographic range and evolutionary influence than once thought. Mamenchisaurids represent an important branch of sauropod evolution - one that pushed the limits of neck elongation and feeding strategy in ways that remain the subject of ongoing scientific interest.

Mamenchisauridae

 
 
 

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