New interpretation of the cranial osteology of the Early Cretaceous turtle Arundelemys
dardeni (Paracryptodira) based on a CT-based re-evaluation of the holotype
Evers, Serjoscha W. ✉; Rollot, Yann; Joyce, Walter G.
Arundelemys dardeni is an Early Cretaceous paracryptodire known from a single, incomplete,
but generally well-preserved skull. Phylogenetic hypotheses of paracryptodires often
find Arundelemys dardeni as an early branching baenid. As such, it has a central role
in understanding the early evolution of the successful clade Baenidae, which survived
the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction, as well as the diversification of Paracryptodira
into its subclades, which recent research suggests to perhaps include helochelydrids,
compsemydids, pleurosternids, and baenids. Computer tomography scans of the holotype
material that were produced for the initial description of Arundelemeys dardeni reveal
several errors in the initial anatomical description of the species, which we correct
based on element-by-element segmentation. In addition, we provide entirely novel anatomical
information, including descriptions of several previously undescribed cranial bones,
the endosseous labyrinth, and the cranial scutes, the latter of which are unknown
for most paracryptodires. We provide an interpretation of cranial scutes which homologizes
the scutes of Arundelemys dardeni with those of other stem turtles.