The sinemydid turtle Ordosemys from the Lower Cretaceous Mengyin Formation of Shandong,
China and its implication for the age of the Luohandong Formation of the Ordos Basin
Chronostratigraphic correlation of terrestrial Early Cretaceous biotas in China is
highly problematic due to the lack of marine deposits, few absolute dates, and limited
number of index fossils. This often leaves vertebrate faunas as one of the few potential
tools for a preliminary biostratigraphy. Taxonomic identity of fragmentary fossils
is, however, often uncertain and many faunas are insufficiently sampled. Turtles are
one of the most common elements of Early Cretaceous biotas of Asia and their skeleton
is frequently preserved more completely than that of other vertebrates- they yet receive
little attention from vertebrate paleontologists. We here record the presence of the
sinemydid turtle Ordosemys leios from the Lower Cretaceous Mengyin Formation of Shandong
Province, China, best known for the first dinosaurs and Mesozoic turtles described
from the country. Ordosemys is the third turtle reported from the Mengyin Formation
along with Sinemys lens and Sinochelys applanata and the only other formation where
Ordosemys is known to co-occur with Sinemys is the Luohandong Formation of the Ordos
Basin (Inner Mongolia), the type and so far only horizon of Ordosemys leios. The presence
of the crocodyli form Shantungosuchus may further define a fauna that is so far only
known from these two formations. The stratigraphic position of the Luohandong Formation
is poorly controlled and it has been placed anywhere between the Valanginian and Aptian.
Published absolute dates from the Mengyin Formation and the numerous shared vertebrate
and invertebrate taxa (now also including turtles) implies a Valanginianearly Hauterivian
age for the Luohandong Formation-in contrast to late Hauterivian-Albian as previously
proposed using the temporal distribution of Psittacosaurus. The new specimen of Ordosemys
leios preserves the only known manus of this species and ecomorphological analysis
of limb proportions implies that it was a less capable swimmer compared to Ordosemys
liaoxiensis coming from the younger Jehol Biota.