This strikes me as a particularly egregious example of the bad habit in dinosaur paleontology of not treating species as real taxa unless they’re in monotypic genera. Arguing that a species was "hidden" before it received its current genus assignment, or that "we finally gained a proper understanding of" a taxon upon it receiving its current genus assignment, doesn't make any sense to me. Surely one cannot argue that we had a "proper understanding" of Megalosaurus bucklandii in 1824 but didn't have a "proper understanding" of Giraffatitan brancai until 1988. I also note that Henderson’s list isn’t consistent whether species within the same genus are included: multiple species are listed for Apatosaurus and Mamenchisaurus but not Camarasaurus, Dicraeosaurus, Diplodocus, or Omeisaurus. So it’s not clear what criteria are being followed here. I think the
most consistent approach would have been to do it by the publication date of the nominal species (which is a well-defined date), regardless of when its
name-bearing type specimen was collected. Certainly, if Henderson is going to be talking about the number of species discovered in the 19th century, he should be dating their discovery date according to the naming of the species, not the date at which they got reassigned to a new genus, so his list of valid 19th century sauropodomorph species is missing at least Haestasaurus becklesii, Camarasaurus grandis, Camarasaurus lentus, Smitanosaurus agilis, and Neuquensaurus australis (plus a few other taxa that I hesitate to accept as valid). His list of valid 19th-century sauropodomorphs includes Atlantosaurus montanus for some reason, even though it is is pretty much universally agreed to be a nomen dubium (and in the unlikely event that the holotype proves to be diagnostic at the species level, there is a pretty good chance it would be the senior synonym of some other Morrison taxon, thus not representing an additional valid species). The list also includes Cetiosaurus brevis, Astrodon johnstoni, Ornithopsis hulkei, Titanosaurus indicus, and Dinodocus mackesoni, all of which are on thin ice at best.
(Side note:
Cetiosaurus brevis Owen, 1842 is the senior objective synonym of
Cetiosaurus conybeari Melville, 1849, the holotype of which is four caudal vertebrae that also form the lectotype of
C. brevis, but not the senior objective synonym of
Pelorosaurus conybeari Mantell, 1850, as Mantell explicitly considered “the humerus alone” as the basis for that taxon. The fact that he considered it “a great probability” that the vertebrae of
C. brevis belonged to the same taxon, and reused the epithet
conybeari, doesn't change that. Whether the holotype humerus of
P. conybeari and lectotype caudal vertebrae of
C. brevis represent the same individual or even the same biological species is unclear.)
Here’s my count of nominal species of sauropod named from 1900 to 1969 (cited in their original combination):
1900–1909 (8 nominal species, 6 taxonomically valid)
-
Diplodocus carnegii Hatcher, 1901 (accepted)
-
Elosaurus parvus Peterson & Gilmore, 1902 (accepted as
Apatosaurus parvus or
Brontosaurus parvus)
-
Brachiosaurus altithorax Riggs, 1903 (accepted)
-
Haplocanthus priscus Hatcher, 1903 (accepted as
Haplocanthosaurus priscus)
-
Haplocanthosaurus utterbacki Hatcher, 1903 (junior subjective synonym of
Haplocanthosaurus priscus)
-
Algoasaurus bauri Broom, 1904 (
nomen dubium)
-
Gigantosaurus africanus Fraas, 1908 (accepted as
Tornieria africana)
-
Gigantosaurus robustus Fraas, 1908 (accepted as
Janenschia robusta)
1910–1919 (8 nominal species, 5 or 6 taxonomically valid)
-
Brachiosaurus brancai Janensch, 1914 (accepted as
Giraffatitan brancai)
-
Brachiosaurus fraasi Janensch, 1914 (junior subjective synonym of
Giraffatitan brancai)
-
Dicraeosaurus hansemanni Janensch, 1914 (accepted)
-
Dicraeosaurus sattleri Janensch, 1914 (accepted)
-
Titanosaurus dacus Nopcsa, 1915 (accepted as
Magyarosaurus dacus)
-
Apatosaurus louisae Holland, 1916 (accepted)
-
Apatosaurus minimus Mook, 1917 (
species inquirenda)
-
Uintasaurus douglassi Holland, 1919 (junior subjective synonym of
Camarasaurus lentus)
1920–1929 (15 nominal species, 8 to 10 taxonomically valid)
-
Alamosaurus sanjuanensis Gilmore, 1922 (accepted)
-
Ornithopsis greppini Huene, 1922 (accepted as
Amanzia greppini)
-
Asiatosaurus mongoliensis Osborn, 1924 (
nomen dubium)
-
Diplodocus hayi Holland, 1924 (accepted as
Galeamopus hayi)
-
Rhoetosaurus brownei Longman, 1926 (accepted)
-
Gigantosaurus dixeyi Haughton, 1928 (accepted as
Malawisaurus dixeyi)
-
Helopus zdanski Wiman, 1929 (accepted as
Euhelopus zdanskyi)
-
Antarctosaurus giganteus Huene, 1929 (
species inquirenda)
-
Antarctosaurus wichmannianus Huene, 1929 (accepted)
-
Campylodon ameghinoi Huene, 1929 (
nomen dubium)
-
Laplatasaurus araukanicus Huene, 1929 (accepted)
-
Loricosaurus scutatus Huene, 1929 (
nomen dubium, possible junior synonym of
Neuquensaurus australis)
-
Titanosaurus robustus Huene, 1929 (
species inquirenda, possible junior synonym of
Neuquensaurus australis)
-
Titanosaurus lydekkeri Huene, 1929 (
nomen dubium)
-
Titanosaurus valdensis Huene, 1929 (
nomen dubium)
1930–1939 (8 or 9 nominal species, 7 taxonomically valid)
-
Aegyptosaurus baharijensis Stromer, 1932 (accepted)
-
Magyarosaurus hungaricus Huene, 1932 (accepted as
Petrustitan hungaricus)
-
Magyarosaurus transylvanicus Huene, 1932 (junior subjective synonym of
Magyarosaurus dacus)
-
Antarctosaurus septentrionalis Huene and Matley, 1933 (accepted as
Jainosaurus septentrionalis)
-
Austrosaurus mckillopi Longman, 1933 (accepted)
-
Mongolosaurus haplodon Gilmore, 1933 (accepted)
-
Tienshanosaurus chitaensis Young, 1937 (accepted)
-
Antarctosaurus jaxarticus Riabinin, 1938 (
nomen dubium or
nomen nudum)
-
Omeisaurus junghsiensis Young, 1939 (accepted)
1940–1949 (3 nominal species, 2 taxonomically valid)
-
Titanosaurus falloti Hoffet, 1942 (
nomen dubium)
-
Sanpasaurus yaoi Young, 1944 (accepted)
-
Amygdalodon patagonicus Cabrera, 1947 (accepted)
1950–1959 (8 nominal species, 4 to 6 taxonomically valid)
-
Camarasaurus annae Ellinger, 1950 (junior subjective synonym of
Camarasaurus lentus)
-
Chiayusaurus lacustris Bohlin, 1953 (
nomen dubium)
-
Mamenchisaurus constructus Young, 1954 (accepted)
-
Rebbachisaurus garasbae Lavocat, 1954 (accepted)
-
Cetiosaurus mogrebiensis Lapparent, 1955 (
species inquirenda)
-
Apatosaurus alenquerensis Lapparent and Zbyszewski, 1957 (accepted as
Lourinhasaurus alenquerensis)
-
Brachiosaurus atalaiensis Lapparent and Zbyszewski, 1957 (accepted as
Lusotitan atalaiensis)
-
Omeisaurus changshouensis Young, 1958 (
species inquirenda)
1960–1969 (2 nominal species, 0 taxonomically valid)
-
Brachiosaurus nougaredi Lapparent, 1960 (
nomen dubium)
- Rebbachisaurus tamesnensis Lapparent, 1960 (nomen dubium)
FWIW, my personal count is that of 539 nominal species of sauropodomorph (including 14 of uncertain or partial sauropodomorph affinities), there are 370 valid species and 35 species inquirendae. Seven of these species were named too recently to be included in this paper. My count is surprisingly close to Henderson's count of 366 (which would now be 373) despite some obvious differences in what we consider to be valid taxa.