In 2018, Penkalski published a study containing a cladistic analyses of such forms. In it, AMNH 5337 and AMNH 5403 were recovered in a joint different position from Euoplocephalus tutus specimens CMN 210, UALVP 31, and AMNH 5406. He named a separate genus for AMNH 5337 and AMNH 5403: Platypelta, with as type species Platypelta coombsi. The generic name is derived from Greek platys, "wide", and plate, "small shield", in reference to the broad osteoderms. The specific name honors Walter P. Coombs Jr., who pioneered the study of ankylosaurs in the late twentieth century.[3]
The holotype, AMNH 5337, was found in a layer of the Dinosaur Park Formation at an altitude of 667 metres, which indicates an age of about 76,8 million years. It consists of a skeleton with skull, lacking the tail and hindlimbs. It represents a mature and aged individual, in view of fused ribs, a fused shoulder girdle, rough articulation surfaces and rough armour.[1]
Specimens AMNH 5403, CMN 8876, ROM 788, and ROM 813 were referred to Platypelta.[3] AMNH 5403 consists of the severely compressed front half of a skeleton including the skull.[1] A short tail club has been stored with this skeleton, but Penkalski doubted the connection, pointing out that the club was not marked nor mentioned in the accession catalogue.[3] CMN 8876 is a skull preserving a single tooth. ROM 788 is a tail club. ROM 813 is a skeleton lacking the skull but containing the entire rump, forelimbs and hindlimbs. Apart from a large number of osteoderms, it preserves skin impressions. It has been secured on three blocks that have not been fully prepared to conserve the impressions. Penkalski already in 2001 suggested it represented a taxon different from Euoplocephalus.[1]
Description
Platypelta is a rather large ankylosaurid. In 2018, its length was estimated at six metres.[3]
According to Penkalski, Platypelta is typified by a number of traits. Some of the armour plates on its rump are large, exceeding twenty-five centimetres in length, and have a rough top surface with a sharp keel continuing into a pointy beak-shape. The snout is constricted just in front of the eye sockets. The upper beak, of the snout, is rounded and relatively small. The vomers at their front side overlap the rear underside of the fused premaxillae. At the rear of the skull, the occipital condyle is large. The squamosal horns, at the rear corners of the skull roof, are low and rough with a broad base and a pitted point extending to behind. The tooth crowns are strongly ornamented. In the lower arm, the ulna is long and lightly built. In the pelvis, the front blade of the ilium only lightly bends to below. The foot is robust with arched claws. On the first cervical halfring, the transverse armour band protecting the top front of the neck, the paired middle osteoderms are elongated and partly keeled with a conical projection. On the first cervical halfring, the lateral, or side, osteoderms have a bent but not wavy keel of which the point sticks out to the rear.[3]
Phylogeny
Platypelta was in 2018 placed, within the Ankylosauridae, in the Ankylosaurinae. More precisely, it was a member of the clade Euoplocephalini, established by Penkalski, which is an approximate synonym of Ankylosaurini in several studies. In the evolutionary tree it was placed above Scolosaurus and below Dyoplosaurus.[3]
^ abcdPenkalski, P., 2001, "Variation in specimens referred to Euoplocephalus tutus", pp 261-298 in: Carpenter, K. (ed.): The Armored Dinosaurs Bloomington (Indiana University Press)
^ abcdefPenkalski, Paul (2018). "Revised systematics of the armoured dinosaur Euoplocephalus and its allies". Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie - Abhandlungen. 287 (3): 261–306. doi:10.1127/njgpa/2018/0717.