Two species were known: the type, S. guilelmiimperatoris, and the now obsolete species S. holzmadensis,[1] which has since been absorbed into S. guilelmiimperatoris.
Discovery and naming
The holotype is MB.R.1992, a large almost complete skeleton from the Upper Lias (Toarcian) Lias Group Formations of Württemberg, Germany. It was offered for sale by Berwmarp Haurr and it was purchased by the State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart in August 1893.[2] It preserved soft tissue that was painted over around ten years later[3] and a cast of the holotype was described in by Ketchum & Benson (2011), who determined that it seems to preserve the impression of a rhomboidal flap of skin in a vertical plane, suggesting that many other plesiosaurs may have been equipped in this way.[4] The holotype was destroyed in 1945.[4]
Seeleyosaurus was initially described as Plesiosaurus guilelmiimperatoris by Dames (1895)[2] before White (1940) moved P. guilelmiimperatoris to its own genus.[1] White (1940) also assigned a second species to Seeleyosaurus as S. holzmadensis which was later determined to be the same animal as S. guilelmiimperatoris.[4]
A second specimen (SMNS 12039), preserved in 3D, was initially the holotype of S. holzmadensis.[1] It was discovered within a chalkstone and shale quarry located between Holzmaden and Zell unter Aichelberg, and it intersected an extremely hard forty centimetres thick layer of Stinkstein chalk, which was deemed worthless. The rocks were dumped in a ravine and the holotype was discovered there in November 1906 by fossil trader Bernhard Hauff. Alongside the holotype of Meyerasaurus victor, it was offered for sale, and financial support by D. Landauer and Victor Fraas allowed the Stuttgarter Königliche Naturalienkabinett to obtain both specimens.[5]
A fragmentary specimen of Seeleyosaurus guilelmiimperatoris has also been identified from the Middle Jurassic of Siberia by Menner (1992).[6]
Description
Seeleyosaurus was a relatively small plesiosaur, measuring 2.9–3.6 m (9.5–11.8 ft) long.[7][8]
Classification
The following cladogram follows an analysis by Ketchum & Benson, 2011.[4]
^ abcWhite, T. E. (1940). Holotype of Plesiosauruslongirostris Blake and classification of the plesiosaurs. Journal of Paleontology 14(5):451-467
^ abcDames, H. W. (1895). Die Plesiosaurier der süddeutschen Liasformation. Abhandlungen der Königlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin 2:1-83
^Wilhelm, B. (2010). Novel anatomy of cryptoclidid plesiosaurs with comments on axial locomotion. M.S. thesis, Marshall University, Huntington, West Virginia, 76 pp.
^Menner, V. V. (1992). "Remains of Plesiosaurs from Middle Jurassic Deposits of Eastern Siberia". Russian Academy of Sciences, Department of Geology, Geophysics, Geochemistry and Mining Sciences, Order of the Red Manner of Labour Geological Institute: 74–91.