研究者業績

田中 公教

タナカ トモノリ  (Tomonori Tanaka)

基本情報

所属
兵庫県立大学 自然・環境科学研究所 准教授
兵庫県立人と自然の博物館 主任研究員
学位
博士(理学)(2020年3月 北海道大学)

J-GLOBAL ID
202001011425278710
researchmap会員ID
R000009915

論文

 11
  • Tomonori Tanaka, Kentaro Chiba, Tadahiro Ikeda, Michael J. Ryan
    Papers in Palaeontology 10(5) 2024年9月2日  査読有り筆頭著者責任著者
    Abstract The herbivorous dinosaur clade Ceratopsia flourished in the northern hemisphere during the Late Jurassic to Late Cretaceous. Previous palaeobiogeographic studies have suggested that their initial diversification occurred in Asia, with early‐branching neoceratopsians extending their geographical range to North America sometime during the Barremian to Albian. However, the specific timing and mode of their dispersal from Asia to North America remains unknown. Here we describe a new, early‐branching neoceratopsian, Sasayamagnomus saegusai gen. et sp. nov., from the Albian Ohyamashimo Formation in southwestern Japan, representing the easternmost fossil record of ceratopsians in Asia. Sasayamagnomus exhibits three diagnostic features in the jugal, squamosal and coracoid, respectively, and also has a unique combination of characters in the lacrimal. Our phylogenetic analysis indicates that Sasayamagnomus forms a clade with Aquilops americanus, one of the earliest neoceratopsians from North America, followed by the sister taxon Auroraceratops rugosus from China. The present time‐calibrated phylogenetic tree indicates that the immigration of neoceratopsians from Asia to North America occurred during the latest Aptian or early Albian, refining the previously suggested timeframe. This aligns with fragmentary neoceratopsian fossil records from the Lower Cretaceous of North America and the initial formation of the Bering land bridge. Furthermore, the simultaneous occurrence of global warming (which enabled the development of extensive forests in the Arctic region) and the emergence of the Bering land bridge during the Aptian–Albian, probably played a crucial role in facilitating the immigration of neoceratopsians from Asia to North America.
  • Tomonori Tanaka, Kazumi Wada, Akiko Shinya, Tadahiro Ikeda
    Palaeontologia Electronica 27(1) 1-19 2024年  査読有り筆頭著者責任著者
  • Tadahiro Ikeda, Hidetoshi Ota, Tomonori Tanaka, Kenji Ikuno, Katsuhiro Kubota, Kohei Tanaka, Haruo Saegusa
    Cretaceous Research 130(105063) 105063-105063 2022年2月  査読有り
  • Kohei Tanaka, Darla K. Zelenitsky, François Therrien, Tadahiro Ikeda, Katsuhiro Kubota, Haruo Saegusa, Tomonori Tanaka, Kenji Ikuno
    Cretaceous Research 114 2020年10月  査読有り
    © 2020 Elsevier Ltd The Kamitaki Locality in the Albian Ohyamashimo Formation in the eastern Hyogo Prefecture of southwestern Japan is among the richest Lower Cretaceous fossil egg sites in the world. So far, eggshells of five different ootaxa, one ornithopod and four theropods, have been identified from the Kamitaki Bonebed Quarry. Although previous discoveries of egg remains were limited to isolated eggshell fragments, here we report on the discovery of a nearly complete egg, several partial eggs, as well as numerous eggshell fragments from horizons of the newly excavated Kamitaki Egg Quarry that are 5.5–6.75 m above the Kamitaki Bonebed Quarry. Taphonomical investigations indicate that the new site preserves the remnants of an in-situ nest of Himeoolithus murakamii oogen. et oosp. nov., mixed with scattered and isolated eggshell fragments of other non-avian theropod ootaxa, including Nipponoolithus ramosus, Prismatoolithus sp., and Subtiliolithus hyogoensis oosp. nov. The most abundant ootaxon at the quarry, Himeoolithus, is represented by four eggs and over 1300 scattered eggshell fragments. Himeoolithus is the smallest non-avian theropod egg known to date (9.9 g in estimated mass) and exhibits an unusually elongated shape (length:width ratio of 2.25) for such as small egg. The presence of six dinosaur ootaxa from the two quarries at the Kamitaki Locality reveals a hidden diversity of small dinosaurs, particularly non-avian theropods, in the Hyogo region and indicates the area was utilized for nesting by various small dinosaur species at the end of the Early Cretaceous.
  • Tomonori Tanaka, Yoshitsugu Kobayashi, Kenji Ikuno, Tadahiro Ikeda, Haruo Saegusa
    Cretaceous Research 113 2020年9月  査読有り筆頭著者責任著者
    © 2020 Elsevier Ltd Asian hesperornithiforms are extremely rare in contrast to North American records; thus, their diversity in Asia during the Cretaceous is unclear. Maastrichtian hesperornithiform materials have been reported from both fluvial and marine deposits in North America but only from fluvial deposits in Asia. Asian hesperornithiforms from Maastrichtian deposits have been considered as freshwater taxa because of their occurrence from fluvial sediments and their histological features. Here, we report the first hesperornithiform record from marine Maastrichtian deposits in Asia. It is represented by an isolated left tibiotarsus from the inter-arc basin deposit of the Kita-ama Formation (lower Maastrichtian), Izumi Group of southwest Japan. It has a shallow tibial incision, fibular crest extending to the mid shaft, and laterally angled lateral articular surface. Although its phylogenetic position within Hesperornithiformes is ambiguous, these characters are similar to non-hesperornithid hesperornithiforms. Unossified proximal and distal epiphyses indicate that this individual was immature. A remarkably thick cortical area of the tibiotarsus suggests that this hesperornithiform was a sea-dwelling bird and that the habitat of this group during the Maastrichtian extended to both terrestrial and marine environments in Asia and North America.

MISC

 9

書籍等出版物

 5

講演・口頭発表等

 38

担当経験のある科目(授業)

 4

所属学協会

 3

共同研究・競争的資金等の研究課題

 5