*■/ s CM -3 "LI B RARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 550-5 FI v.7-9 GEOLOGY UNIVERSITY Of ILLINOIS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN GEOLOGY — » fates? Dot b°0k °" or ^fore the •■atest Date stamped below GEOLOGY LIBRARY *- 50.5 OQ THEUbKARYOFTHE NOV 2 8 1941 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS GEOLOGICAL SERIES OF FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY Volume 8 Chicago, October 31, 1941 No. 8 A NEW PHORORHACOID BIRD FROM THE DESEADO FORMATION OF PATAGONIA By Bryan Patterson Assistant Curator, Paleontology Results of the Marshall Field Paleontological Expeditions to Argentina and Bolivia, 1922-27 The Marshall Field Paleontological Expeditions, under the leader- ship of Mr. Elmer S. Riggs, brought together one of the finest collec- tions of phororhacoid birds that has yet been made. The collection is outstanding both for the excellence of certain individual specimens, those representing the Pliocene genera Mesembriornis and Procariama being especially noteworthy, and for its coverage of the group as a whole. Material from nearly all horizons in which these birds are known is included. It has been my great good fortune to be entrusted by Mr. Riggs with the study of this collection, a privilege for which I am exceed- ingly grateful. In the course of the work on it I have been able, through the courtesy of numerous institutions and individuals, to examine virtually all phororhacoid material except that contained in the South American museums. Even this deficiency has been to some extent overcome through the kindness of Dr. Martin Doello- Jurado and Professor Alejandro F. Bordas, who have sent casts of several specimens in the Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales. A large manuscript has been prepared, but publication has unfortu- nately been delayed by the war. The authorities of the British Museum (Natural History) had courteously arranged to send a number of casts and photographs of type and unfigured specimens in the Ameghino Collection but the preparation of these is impossible under present conditions. Without them the work can hardly be No. 507 49 Mat,.,.. > ^iovwry 50 Field Museum of Natural History— Geology, Vol. 8 completed satisfactorily. Under the circumstances, therefore, it has been decided to publish certain preliminary papers of which the present, devoted to the only new form obtained by the Marshall Field Expeditions, is the first. Acknowledgments and sources of material will be detailed in the final publication, but I must mention here my indebtedness to the American Association of Museums, whose award of a Carnegie Corporation Grant-in-Aid for Travel made it possible for me to examine the Ameghino Collection in the British Museum (Natural History) and the specimens preserved in the Museum Nationale d'Histoire Naturelle. The drawing in this paper is by Mr. John Conrad Hansen. Order Gruiformes Suborder Cariamae Superfamily Phororhacoidea Family Phororhacidae Andrewsornis1 gen. nov. Type species. — A. abbotti sp. nov. Distribution. — Late mid or early late Oligocene, Patagonia. Diagnosis. — Generally similar to Phororhacos in the known parts, differing as follows: Skull slightly shallower, antorbital vacuity with more oblique anterior rim, palatine plate not descending as far below tomium. Mandible more slender with rather shorter sym- physis and larger, more oval vacuity, small opening present behind vacuity. Coracoid with much larger procoracoidal process and deeper medial groove. Ungual phalanx of digit II proportionately larger. Andrewsornis abbotti2 sp. nov. Type. — F.M. No. P13417, incomplete skull, mandibles, proximal portion of coracoid, second and ungual phalanges of digit II. Col- lected by John B. Abbott, September 18, 1923. Horizon and locality. — Deseado formation, Cabeza Blanca, Chubut, Argentina. Diagnosis. — As for the genus, for measurements see below. 1 Named for the late Charles W. Andrews in tribute to the excellence of his work on fossil birds in general and on the phororhacoids in particular. 2 Named for the late John Bernard Abbott, veteran collector and preparator, to whose instruction in the practical aspects of paleontology I owe much. X 1-1 o 51 52 Field Museum of Natural History— Geology, Vol. 8 Andrewsornis is the first member of the Phororhacidae1 to be recorded from the Deseado, the other supposed members of the family- found in this horizon having been erroneously referred (see below). The characters distinguishing it from Phororhacos are few and of about the same order of magnitude as those separating the latter from the Pliocene Mesembriornis; the three genera could well be members of a single phylum. The small opening behind the main vacuity of the mandible of Andrewsornis may be homologous with the posterior vacuity of the Psilopteridae. The oblique anterior rim of the antorbital vacuity and the relatively shallow palatine plate are definite approaches to this family. Apart from these rather slight exceptions, however, the characters of Andrewsornis are overwhelmingly those of the Phororhacidae. In fact, broadly speaking, it is almost as specialized a form as Mesembriornis, the latest known member of the family. The contemporary forms belong- ing to the Psilopteridae and Brontornithidae are equally as special- ized, a fact which indicates that the radiation of the group began long prior to Deseado time. The recording of the new genus and species demands .a brief review of the described Deseado members of the superfamily. These are: Physornis fortis Ameghino (1895, pp. 576-577), Smiliornis penetrans Ameghino, Phororhacos affinis Ameghino, Aucornis euryrhyncus Ameghino and A. solidus Ameghino (1899, p. 9).2 Physornis fortis was based on what Ameghino considered to be a fragment of a mandible. Before going to London I suspected that A. abbotti would prove to belong to this form. An examination of the type specimen, however, showed that it is an unrecognizable fragment, quite possibly not even avian. It could equally well be a scrap from the iliac crest of a large ungulate such as Parastrapo- therium or Pyrotherium. The genus and species must accordingly be rejected as indeterminate.3 Smiliornis penetrans is based on the proximal end of a coracoid. It is valid and referable to the Psilopteridae. 1 As will be discussed in a later paper, I believe that there are three families of the group, the Phororhacidae, the Psilopteridae (Pelecyornis Ameghino is a synonym of Psilopterus Moreno and Mercerat) and the Brontornithidae. 2 The forms described in 1899 were recorded as coming from the "Formation Guaranitico," an obsolete term covering Deseado and earlier formations. I am certain, however, that they are all from the Deseado. Casts of the type specimens of "Phororhacos" affinis and Aucornis euryrhyncus agree perfectly with specimens from this horizon in the Amherst College and Field Museum collections. 3 At the British Museum I discussed this specimen with several persons who were well qualified to judge. Their opinions coincided with mine. A Phororhacoid Bird from Patagonia 53 Phororhacos affinis is based on the proximal and distal ends of a relatively small tarso-metatarsus. It is not a member of the genus Phororhacos but is a psilopterid.1 Although there are no comparable parts, I believe that the course least liable to cause future confusion is to place "P." affinis provisionally in the synonymy of S. penetrans. Aucornis is a typical brontornithid, close to and probably ancestral to Rostrornis of the Santa Cruz. The only other author who has described Deseado birds is Loomis (1914, pp. 225-232). 2 He referred three specimens to "Physornis fortis," and described a number of others under Ameghino's Loxornis clivus, which he believed to be a close relative of Psilopterus. Of the material referred to "Physornis,'' the femur (fig. 149) is certainly referable to Aucornis, probably to A. euryrhyncus. The figured phalanx (fig. 150) is that of a litoptern, as already noted by Krag- lievich (1932, p. 333), possibly Coniopternium. The other phalanx mentioned by Loomis (p. 228) is the distal end of the second of digit III of a phororhacid, very probably Andrewsornis abbotti. The material referred to Loxornis is a heterogeneous assemblage belonging to several orders. In the first place the genus Loxornis is probably, as Ameghino suspected (1895, p. 97), a member of the Anseriformes, and none of the specimens described appear to belong to this order. In the second, not all of them are phororhacoids, but only those depicted in figs. 155-158 which are referable to Smiliornis penetrans. The humerus (fig. 152), sternum (fig. 153), and coracoid (fig. 154) definitely do not belong to this group. The claw shown in fig. 159 appears to be from an edentate mammal. MEASUREMENTS (In millimeters) Depth of beak at mid point 115.0 Length of beak to antero-ventral corner of antorbital vacuity 194 . 0 Length from antero-ventral corner of antorbital vacuity to posterior extremity of quadrato-jugal 205 . 0 f Length 394.0 Mandible J Length of symphysis 99.8 [ Depth of ramus at coracoid process 65.3 Coracoid / A-p. diam. of proximal end 31 .0 \ Tr. diam. of proximal end 35.7 Second phalanx of digit II, length, measured from centers of articular faces 30.3 Ungual phalanx of digit II, length from center of articular face to tip 58.4 1 This is also true of the small Santacruzean forms described by Ameghino as Phororhacos modicus and P. delicatus. These are referable to Psilopterus, and doubtfully separable from P. australis. 2 He overlooked Ameghino's paper of 1899, as did Lambrecht (1933). Skull. REFERENCES Ameghino, F. 1895. Les oiseaux fossiles de Patagonie. Bol. Inst. Geogr. Arg., 15, pp. 501- 602, figs. 1-44. 1899. Sinopsis geologico-paleontologica. Suplemento (adiciones y correc- ciones). La Plata. Imprenta "La Libertad," pp. 1-13. Kraglievich, L. 1932. Una gigantesca ave fosil del Uruguay. Devincenzia gallinali n. gen. n. sp., tipo de un nueva familia Devincenziidae del orden Stereornithes. An. Mus. Nat. Hist. Montevideo, (2), 3, pp. 323-353, pis. 57-59. Lambrecht, K. 1933. Handbuch der Palaeornithologie. Berlin, Gebriider Borntraeger, pp. i-xix, 1-1024, figs. 1-209, pis. 1-4. Loomis, F. B. 1914. The Deseado Formation of Patagonia. Amherst, pp. 1-232, figs. 1-160. 54 THE LlbKAKY Of THt NOV 2 8 1941 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS