Search results for "Diapsid"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

The marine diapsid reptile Endennasaurus from the Upper Triassic of Italy

2005

The marine reptile Endennasaurus from the Upper Triassic Zorzino Limestone of northern Italy is rede- scribed and reassessed. New details of the skull and postcra- nial skeleton are revealed, confirming the attribution of this genus to the diapsid reptile clade Thalattosauriformes. Phylo- genetic analysis suggests that Endennasaurus was related to the European genus Askeptosaurus and the Chinese Anshun- saurus. Despite a rather conservative postcranial morphology, Endennasaurus clearly occupied a highly specialized dietary niche as it combined a slender tapering premaxillary rostrum with a complete absence of either marginal or palatal teeth.

biologyRostrumAskeptosaurusPaleontologyPostcraniamarinepalaeoecologybiology.organism_classificationDiapsidTriassicMegalancosaurusreptilesNeodiapsidaPaleontologyItaly reptiles Thalattosauriformes Triassic marine palaeoecologyEndennasaurusItalyMarine reptileEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeologyThalattosauriformes
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A procynosuchid cynodont from central Europe

1988

Diversified assemblages of non-mammalian synapsids (or mammal-like reptiles) have long been known from the Upper Permian of southern Africa1 and the Russian Platform2. In contrast, Upper Permian deposits in central and western Europe have rarely yielded remains of terrestrial vertebrates. The German Kupferschiefer (basal Zechstein 1) and its English equivalent, the Marl Slate, have yielded several reptiles: the gliding diapsid Coelurosauravus3 (also known from the Lower Sakamena Formation of Madagascar3−4), the archosauromorph Protorosaurus5, and the pareiasaur Parasaurus6. The Cuttie's Hillock Sandstone of northern Scotland has yielded the pareiasaur Elginia and two dicynodont synapsids an…

CynodontPaleontologyMultidisciplinarybiologyPaleozoicPermianProcynosuchusElginiaDicynodontbiology.organism_classificationPareiasaurDiapsidGeologyNature
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Bone histology, microanatomy, and growth of the nothosauroid Simosaurus gaillardoti (Sauropterygia) from the Upper Muschelkalk of southern Germany/Ba…

2016

Abstract Simosaurus gaillardoti was a large eosauropterygian (Sauropterygia), a group of diverse diapsid marine reptiles. Its occurrence correlates to transgression phases in the Germanic Basin and a former morphological study hypothesized that Simosaurus was capable of sustained swimming. Microanatomical analysis of five long bones revealed functional differences between the humerus and femur but did not confirm sustained swimming in Simosaurus. It had certain active swimming abilities but – based on microanatomy – it was a less efficient swimmer when compared to contemporaneously living nothosaurs. Simosaurus grew with well-vascularized coarse parallel-fibred bone tissue. Growth marks app…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinebiologyRange (biology)SimosaurusAlligatorGeneral EngineeringAnatomybiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesDiapsidSauropterygia03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologybiology.animalFemurHatchlingMarine transgressionComptes Rendus Palevol
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