The Longguan dinosaur tracksite in the Sichuan Basin (China) is described. It is located in the uppermost part of the Upper Triassic Xujiahe Formation and displays a single, unusual trackway consisting of 19 deeply impressed pes imprints. All tracks have suffered from erosion over many years of exposure, but they still reveal interesting details such as conspicuous elongated grooves, interpreted here as toe and claw drag marks. The trackmaker, a medium-sized archosaur, was walking in a thick and relatively soft layer of sand. The elongated, oval shape of the footprints resembles the ichnogenus Eosauropus from North America and Europe, assigned to facultative bipedal sauropodomorphs. The Chinese track differs by inward rotation of the footprints toward the midline, whereas in Eosauropus, these are turned strictly outward. Other ichnotaxa and possible trackmakers are discussed, but presently, a distinct assignment cannot be given. The Longguan trackway enlarges the scarce footprint record from the Triassic of China.
Introduction
The Sichuan Basin, also called the “Red Basin”, is located in SW China (Fig. 1) and is renowned for its Middle and Late Jurassic dinosaur fauna in the Zigong area. Triassic deposits are relatively rare, and in the western Sichuan Basin mainly belong to the Upper Triassic Xujiahe Formation (Peng et al. 2005). Apart from bony fishes such as Shuniscus and Jialingichthys (Su 1983), the Xujiahe Formation has not yet revealed many vertebrate fossils, even though, in Fushun County, southeast of Zigong City, the tracks described herein have been known for a few hundred years at least, and local people have called them “Rhinoceros Footprints” (Xing et al. 2011).
More recently discovered tracks include tridactyl tracks attributed to the theropod ichnotaxon Pengxianpus (Yang and Yang 1987), tracks of a mammal or mammal-like reptile in Peng County (Yang and Yang 1987; Lockley and Matsukawa 2009; Xing et al. 2013), and theropod tracks in Tianquan County (Gou 1996; Wang et al. 2005), which have not been studied in detail so far. Moreover, in 2009, Guangzhao Peng and a colleague from the Zigong Dinosaur Museum have discovered a new dinosaur tracksite with a single trackway on the Longguan Mountain (also known as Luoguan Mountain), Fushun County, southeast of Zigong City (Fig. 1). In summer 2011, Lida Xing, Jianjun Li, Guangzhao Peng, and other colleagues studied this site in greater detail and the description and interpretation of the trackway from the Longguan tracksite is in the focus of the present work.
Abbreviations. —FS, Fushun tracksite, Zigong, Sichuan Province, China.
Geological setting
The Longguan tracksite is located on a slope with a dip of 13° about 50 m from the peak of Longguan Mountain (400 m), Zhixi Township, Tongsi Town, Fushun County, southeast of Zigong City, Sichuan Province (Fig. 1).
Most of the outcrops around the Longguan tracksite belong to the Lower Jurassic Zhenzhuchong Formation, which is characterized by cross-bedded, rather thin sandstone and without any thick sandstone beds (Peng et al. 2005). The Upper Triassic (Rhaetian, sensu Qiao et al. 2012) Xujiahe Formation, on the other hand, consists mainly of thick sandstone beds, mudstone, and interlayered coal seams, which form rhythmite sequences of different thicknesses, from a few hundred to 3000 m, often rich in plants and bivalve fossils (Fig. 2; Gu et al. 1997). The Longguan tracksite is located on top of a thick sandstone unit, showing typical features of the Xujiahe Formation and can be assigned to the 4th out of six members. This is further confirmed by field mapping, the Zigong City geological map (Sichuan Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources 1990), analyses of satellite images, and aerial photographs. The 4th member of the Xujiahe Formation is made up of delta plain and delta-front deposits (Hu and Bao 2008), which formed under a warm and dry climate (Xu et al. 2010).
Trackway preservation and description
Nineteen tracks were identified and attributed to a single trackway (Figs. 3–5, Table 1). They are labelled as FS-1 to FS-19, where FS is the abbreviation for the Longguan (from Fushun) tracksite. The original tracks all remain in the field, and the Zigong Dinosaur Museum plans to make a cast of the whole trackway in the near future.
Due to the exposure of the tracksite, possibly for several tens to hundreds of years, weathering of the surface and tracks is severe. The surface and the tracks have deteriorated to different degrees by growth of plant roots and circulating water. Several carved and washed-out straight or rounded grooves can be observed on the surface and between the tracks. The most noticeable of these grooves can be observed between FS-6 and FS-7, FS-7 and FS-8, FS10 and FS-12, and between FS-14 and FS-15 (Fig. 3A, 5C). Rather than tail drag impressions (see Platt and Hasiotis 2008 for classification), we interpret these grooves as erosional dissolution features around roots, because most are straight, not exclusively associated with tracks, and also can be observed elsewhere on the surrounding surface.
The tracks are preserved as up to 30 cm deep impressions (negative epirelief) in a single, thick sandstone layer. Because none of the tracks contains any track fill, and because the track-bearing surface is the uppermost bed in the outcrop, the track infilling material and the original preservational state of the tracks is unknown. Important original track features may have been eroded away or may at least have been modified. Nevertheless, some of the tracks are still reasonably well preserved and reveal some morphological characteristics such as scratch marks. For this reason, the tracks are interpreted as (deep) true tracks or more precisely (deep) underprints sensu Marty et al. (2009).
All tracks have a relatively shallow wall and a deeper floor of the track (Figs. 4, 5A, Table 1). The wall includes occasional impressions at the rear of some of the tracks and elongated grooves in the anterior part that follow the slope. The floor is thought to correspond approximately to the dimensions of the trackmaker's foot, whereas the wall is related to the whole movement (impact) of the foot.
The mean length of the floor is 211 mm and the mean width 153 mm. The length to width ratio of the floor varies between 1.0–1.9, with an average of 1.4, indicating that the trackmaker's foot was longer than wide.
In some of the tracks (notably FS-5, FS-6, FS-9, FS-12; Fig. 4), elongated grooves are connected with the anterior part of the shallow peripheral depressions, and they are interpreted as toe and claw drag marks. On the anterior part of the right pes track FS-12 (Fig. 4), the two best-preserved elongated grooves can be observed, where the exterior (right) groove has a length of 193 mm and a width of 51 mm, and the internal (left) groove a length of 133 mm, and a width of 52 mm, respectively. Both grooves on FS-12 are proximally wider, and narrow distally into fairly sharp tips. Similar to FS-12, the left tracks FS-5 and FS-9 have an anteriorly elongated groove (Figs. 4, 5A). Possibly these grooves were initially made up of several (at least two) grooves but this is now difficult to decipher, because of their washed-out appearance.
The right track FS-10 and the left track FS-11 are connected, which suggests that the trackmaker was sliding backwards with its left foot towards the impression of its right foot. FS-5, FS-6, and FS-19 are distinctly elongated backwards. This is interpreted as the trackmaker's foot sliding forward on the slippery substrate into the final position Fig. 5A).
All tracks are rotated slightly inward (towards the trackway midline), but otherwise, the Fushun trackway is characterized by an irregular configuration. Pace length varies between 558 and 859 mm (695 mm on average), stride length between 948 and 1351 mm (1142 mm on average), and pace angulation between 102° and 144° (123° on average) (Table 1). For instance, the pace length between FS-1 and FS-2 is 859 mm, immediately dropping to 656 mm between FS-2 and FS-3, and later on fluctuating between 600 and 700 mm. The shortest pace lengths are located between FS-9 and FS- 13 being associated with a slight turn in the trackway, and with a distinct sliding movement between FS-10 and FS-11. These tracks are also the deepest tracks of the trackway.
Discussion
Ichnotaxonomy and trackmaker identification. —Because the Fushun trackway consists of substrate-kinematics- dominated, unusually deep tracks, that furthermore have suffered from recent weathering, it is difficult to assign it to an ichnotaxon. Furthermore, it is not certain whether it was made by an animal moving bipedally or if the manus imprints were simply destroyed or overprinted by the pes. The size and orientation of the pes imprints and the relatively narrow trackway pattern indicate an archosaur as the trackmaker. The two anterior, elongated grooves, as notably observed in FS-12 (Fig. 4), represent drag marks of (at least) two separated long digits. Interestingly, this “didactyl” pattern occurs continuously in all imprints. It seems that the trackmaker had a pes with two digits dominating by their length and/or robustness. Therefore, typical symmetrical, tridactyl theropods can be excluded. Deep theropod tracks, described for example from the Lower Cretaceous of the Paluxy River (Kuban 1989), show three digits and a long metatarsal impression (“heel”) that is much narrower compared with the Longguan tracks. Also, in the former, the digits are more widely spread. The same is true for ornithischians with a tridactyl to tetradactyl pes that also would have left three distinct digits when being deeply impressed.
A look at sauropodomorphs as possible trackmakers reveals different similarities. Late Triassic-Early Jurassic trackways of bipedal and/or facultative bipedal archosaurs (possibly sauropodomorphs) with impressions of separated, long digits are known by the ichnotaxa Kalosauropus (Ellenberger 1970), Agrestipus (Weems 1987), Evazoum (Nicosia and Loi 2003), Pseudotetrasauropus (Ellenberger 1972), and Otozoum (Rainforth 2003), that have been included in the OPEK plexus and the ichnofamily Otozoidae (Lull 1904), respectively, by Lockley et al. (2006b). In particular the trackmakers of Pseudotetrasauropus and Otozoum footprints could possibly have left footprints of oval shape, similar to those seen in the Longguan trackway, when walking on a moist, deep substrate (Fig. 6A–C). Besides sauropodomorphs, there are further suggestions about the trackmakers of the OPEK plexus footprints: an indeterminate archosaur (Olsen and Galton 1984) or ornithischian (Gierliński 1997) for Pseudotetrasauropus, a small aetosaur (Weems 2006) for Agrestipus, a dinosauriform archosaur such as the herbivorous Silesaurus (Dzik 2003; Piechowski and Dzik 2010) or the poposauroid archosaur Effigia (Nesbitt 2007) for Evazoum (D'Orazi Porchetti et al. 2008).
A further ichnotaxon attributed to sauropodomorph trackmakers is Eosauropus (Lockley et al. 2006a, 2011) (Figs. 3B, C, 6D), which shows some similarities with the trackway from Longguan, particularly in the elongate, oval shape of the imprints. Eosauropus was originally described as the track of a quadruped (Lockley et al. 2006a), but has also been documented by pes-only versions (Lockley et al. 2011). The latter could be due to bipedal movement and facultative bipedality, as well as to the overstep of the manus by the pes (Lockley et al. 2011). It has to be noted here, that if the Longguan trackmaker was a facultative biped, it would probably have used its forelegs while walking on unstable substrates. Nevertheless, there is a distinct difference in the trackway pattern between Eosauropus and the specimen from Longguan. In the former, the imprints are strongly outward rotated relative to the midline, whereas in the latter, these point inward (compare Fig. 3A1, A2 and B, C). This cannot be explained by variation of the gait on the slippery and deep substrate. It is more likely that it is an anatomical signal. Therefore, the Longguan trackway cannot be assigned to Eosauropus.
Non-dinosaurian archosaurs have to be considered as well. A distinct feature in all imprints of the Longguan trackway is that the outer digit trace is the longest. It is curved outward due to the dynamics of the pes. It is likely, that it represents digit IV, which is the outermost of the anterior digit group in the archosaur pes. A more laterally positioned digit would probably have left a further trace, but this cannot be observed. If this interpretation is correct, and if digit IV in the pes was longest, this indicates a more primitive archosaur. For example, semi-aquatic phytosaurs, which were common on Late Triassic Pangaea, have a pes with digit IV longest or subequal with III. Their tracks have been identified as the ichnogenus Apatopus (Baird 1957; Padian and Pchelnikova 2010; Klein and Lucas 2013), which shows a plantigrade to semi-plantigrade pes with digit IV longest and often with an outward curved trace of the latter. However, as in the comparison with Eosauropus, the trackway pattern is different by the “toed-in” orientation of the imprints that are outward rotated in Apatopus. Also, Apatopus has a manus imprint that is positioned anterior to the pes, whereas the trackway described here lacks this feature (but see possible explanation above). Presently, it is impossible to assign the trackway from Longguan to any distinct archosaur group.
Track formation and foot kinematics. —The Fushun trackway is unusual in that the tracks are very deep, having been made in a thick layer of unstable substrate. In the ternary track classification diagram of Padian and Olsen (1984), the Fushun tracks would plot into the substrate-kinematics dominated field. Thus, they are not useful for ichnotaxonomic purposes, but they can reveal information about foot kinematics in a deep substrate. The irregular trackway configuration indicates that the trackmaker performed a particular locomotion style, adapted to cross an unstable substrate. This involved the foot sliding forward several times over the slippery substrate into the final position of the foot, forming the major and deepest part (floor) of the tracks. During foot withdrawal, the toes and claws produced the anterior, elongated grooves interpreted here as drag marks. There is no evidence for a (partial) collapse of the tracks, indicating that the substrate was coherent enough to retain the shape of the tracks, before they were filled and covered up. The slight turn between FS-9 and FS-13 and the documented sliding movement between FS-10 and FS-11 are interpreted as the trackmaker was slowing down to turn, being unstable for a moment, before it moved on and accelerated again.
Table 1.
Trackway parameters (in cm) of the Fushun trackway. Abbreviations: DF, deeper floor (Internal diameter, corresponding approximately to the trackmaker's foot dimensions); MD, maximum depth; ML, maximum length; MW, maximum width; PA, pace angulation; PL, pace length; SL, stride length; SW, shallow wall (external diameter); R/L, right/left; “-”, measurement not possible or not applicable.
The Late Triassic Xujiahe Formation ichnocoenosis on a Chinese and global scale. —Vertebrate tracks from the Xujiahe Formation include: (i) the archosaur trackway of unknown affinity, described in the present work; (ii) largesized tridactyl tracks named Pengxianpus from Peng County and attributed to theropods (Yang and Yang 1987; Lockley and Matsukawa 2009; Xing et al. 2013); the Pengxianpus tracks lack detailed comparisons and interpretations and only two successive tracks are known, representing a single pace with a length of 93 cm; these tracks were first attributed to a prosauropod (Yang and Yang 1987), but Lockley and Matsukawa (2009) considered them to be similar to the North American ichnotaxon Atreipus, attributed to theropods (Thulborn 1993), ornithopods (Olsen and Baird 1986) and dinosauromorphs (Haubold and Klein 2000; D'Orazi Porchetti et al. 2008); for assignments see also Xing et al. (2013) and Lockley et al. (2013); (iii) small tridactyl tracks from Tianquan County (Gou 1996; Wang et al. 2005; Xing et al. 2013), having a mean length of 11 cm and attributed to theropods; (iv) mammal or mammal-like reptile tracks from Peng County, on the same slab as Pengxianpus, but without any detailed description provided as yet (Lockley and Matsukawa 2009; Xing et al. 2013).
Conclusions and outlook
The Longguan trackway was left by a medium-sized to large archosaur that was either a quadruped overstepping its forefeet impressions with its hindfeet, or an obligate/facultative biped. An assignment to a distinct trackmaker or ichnotaxon cannot be given. Together with the presence of small and large-sized theropod tracks, and footprints of mammal-like tetrapods, the record indicates a larger ichno- and vertebrate diversity for the Upper Triassic Xujiahe Formation than previously assumed (Gu et al. 1997). A future task is further prospecting for tracks in the Xujiahe Formation and to revise and describe the Xujiahe Formation ichnocoenosis in more detail. Thus, it may be compared on a more global scale with other Upper Triassic track-bearing localities of eastern North America (e.g., Weems 1987, 1992; Lockley and Hunt 1995), Europe (e.g., Haubold 1984; Lockley and Meyer 2000; Klein and Lucas 2010), southern Africa (e.g., Ellenberger 1972; Olsen and Galton 1984), northern Africa (Lagnaoui et al. 2012), and South America (e.g., Marsicano and Barredo 2004; Melchor and de Valais 2006; Marsicano et al. 2007). These are generally dominated by Brachychirotherium tracks and tridactyl tracks of the Grallator-Eubrontes type (Klein and Lucas 2010). How far the assemblage from the Xujiahe Formation is distinctive or matches other localities, also in a biostratigraphic context, has to be explored.
Acknowledgements
We thank Martin G. Lockley (Dinosaur Tracks Museum, University of Colorado Denver, USA) and Simone D'Orazi Porchetti (Sapienza Università di Roma, Italy) for their constructive comments and reviews, as well as Christian A. Meyer (Natural History Museum Basel, Switzerland) and Julien D. Divay (University of Alberta, Alberta, Canada) for their suggestions and comments on an earlier version of the manuscript. This research project was supported by the Zigong Dinosaur Museum.