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Shape of articular surface of crocodilian (Archosauria) elbow joints and its relevance to sauropsids
Authors:Shin‐ichi Fujiwara  Hajime Taru  Daisuke Suzuki
Institution:1. The University Museum, The University of Tokyo, 7‐3‐1 Hongo, Bunkyo‐Ku, Tokyo 113‐0033, Japan;2. Kanagawa Prefectural Museum of Natural History, 499 Iryuda, Odawara, Kanagawa 250‐0031, Japan;3. Department of Anatomy, Sapporo Medical University, School of Medicine, Chuo‐Ku, Sapporo 060‐8556, Japan
Abstract:The determination of area and shape of articular surfaces on the limb bones of extinct archosaurs is difficult because of postmortem decomposition of the fibrous tissue and articular cartilages that provide the complex three‐dimensional joint surfaces in vivo. This study aims at describing the shape of the articular cartilages in the elbow joints of six crocodilian specimens; comparing its structure with that of four birds, three testudines, and five squamates; and comparing the shapes of the surfaces of the calcified and the articular cartilages in the elbow joints of an Alligator specimen. The shapes of the articular cartilages of crocodilian elbow joint are shown to resemble those of birds. The humerus possesses an olecranon fossa positioned approximately at the midportion of the distal epiphysis and bordering the margin of the extensor side of the articular surface. The ulna possesses a prominent intercotylar process at approximately the middle of its articular surface, and splits the surface into the radial and ulnar cotylae. This divides the articular cartilage into an articular surface on the flexor portion, and the olecranon on the extensor portion. The intercotylar process fits into the olecranon fossa to restrict elbow joint extension. Dinosaurs and pterosaurs, phylogenetically bracketed by Crocodylia and Aves (birds), may have possessed a similar olecranon fossa and intercotylar process on their articular cartilages. Although these shapes are rarely recognizable on the bones, their impressions on the surfaces of the calcified cartilages provide an important indication of the extensor margin of the articular surfaces. This, in turn, helps to determine the maximum angle of extension of the elbow joint in archosaurs. J. Morphol., 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Keywords:cartilage  joint  olecranon  elbow  Archosauria
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