Udelartitan
- Total Dino
- Apr 27
- 3 min read
Updated: Oct 31
MEANING: "Universidad de la República" giant
PERIOD: Late Cretaceous
CONTINENT: South America
Udelartitan had the typical sauropod body plan, standing on four thick pillar-like legs, and possessing a long neck. Titanosaurs are a very diverse group, and Udelartitan was a small one, estimated at only 15 m in body length. Though a skull has yet to be discovered, it probably had peglike teeth, and a large gut for processing vegetation.

Abstract from paper: The up to 200 m thick Upper Cretaceous deposits of Uruguay includes from base to top the Guichón, Mercedes, and Asencio formations, plus the lateral correlate of the latter, the Queguay Formation. In 2006, the most complete sauropod from the country was excavated from the Guichón Formation near Araújo, Paysandú Department. Augmented by new specimens reported here, the material includes sixty caudal vertebrae (all strongly procoelous, except for the biconvex first one), a partial coracoid, long bone fragments (proximal and distal portions of tibia, proximal portion of fibula), two astragali, and six metatarsals, as well as associated eggshell fragments. The Uruguayan titanosaur shows a unique combination of characters (biconvex first caudal centrum, pneumatic foramina in the anteriormost caudal centra, dorsal tuberosities on the transverse processes of the anterior caudal vertebrae, well developed fibular knob, pyramidal astragalus), as well as a potential autapomorphy – middle caudal centra condyles with hexagonal contour – allowing the proposition of new genus and species, Udelartitan celeste. Phylogenetic analyses were for the first time performed to assess the relations of that taxon, which was recovered either as a saltasaurine saltasaurid or a non-saltasaurid saltasauroid. Further, one of the analyses show Udelartitan celeste nested within a clade including Late Cretaceous titanosaurs with a biconvex first caudal vertebra, such as Alamosaurus sanjuanensis, Baurutitan britoi, and Pellegrinisaurus powelli. This contribution demonstrates that at least two titanosaur lineages were present in the Late Cretaceous of Uruguay: Saltasauroidea and Aeolosaurini, the latter recently recognized in the stratigraphically younger Asencio Formation.
Udelartitan is from the Late Cretaceous. The Cretaceous is the third and final geological period of the Mesozoic Era, with the Late Cretaceous making up roughly the second half of it, lasting from about 100 to 66 million years ago. It was a time of significant evolutionary change, with dinosaurs reaching their greatest diversity before the mass extinction at the end of the Cretaceous.
The Cretaceous was a period with a relatively warm climate, though the Late Cretaceous experienced a global cooling trend, caused by falling levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. The continents were nearing their present positions, but high sea levels flooded low-lying regions, turning Europe into an archipelago, and forming the Western Interior Seaway in North America. These seas were home to a variety of marine reptiles, including mosasaurs and plesiosaurs, while pterosaurs and birds shared the skies.
On land, dinosaurs continued to thrive and diversify during the Late Cretaceous, producing many of the most well-known goups, including tyrannosaurs, hadrosaurs, and pachycephalosaurs. Established Cretaceous dinosaur clades like the ceratopsians, ankylosaurs, and dromaeosaurs continued to flourish. Sauropod species consisted almost exclusively of titanosaurs, which seemed to be confined to the Southern Hemisphere for much of the Late Cretaceous. Flowering plants and grasses diversified and spread, becoming the dominant flora similar to what we see today.
The Cretaceous (along with the Mesozoic) ended with the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) extinction event, a large mass extinction in which many groups, including non-avian dinosaurs, pterosaurs, and large marine reptiles, died out. This event, likely triggered by an asteroid impact, is marked by the abrupt K-Pg boundary, a distinct geologic layer separating the Mesozoic and Cenozoic Eras. In its aftermath, mammals and avian dinosaurs rapidly diversified, becoming the dominant land animals of the Cenozoic Era.

Udelartitan is a saltasauroid titanosaur. Saltasauroids are a clade of derived titanosaurs that thrived during the Late Cretaceous and are among the last and most specialized members of the sauropod lineage. They are primarily known from South America, though fossils have also been found in Asia and elsewhere. These sauropods tended to be smaller and more compact than their earlier relatives, with some species estimated to have been under 15 meters in length - small by sauropod standards. Despite their reduced size, they retained the characteristic long necks and tails of their lineage.
One of the most distinctive traits of saltasauroids is the presence of bony armor, or osteoderms, embedded in their skin - a rare feature among sauropods. This dermal armor suggests a possible evolutionary response to increased predation pressures during the Late Cretaceous. Their skeletons often show adaptations toward a more robust and stocky build, possibly indicating changes in locomotion or lifestyle compared to earlier titanosaurs. As one of the last surviving sauropod groups before the end-Cretaceous extinction, saltasauroids represent the final phase in the long evolutionary history of these giant herbivores.









