119 research outputs found
New data on the ichthyosaur Platypterygius hercynicus and its implications for the validity of the genus
The description of a nearly complete skull from the late Albian of northwestern France
reveals previously unknown anatomical features of Platypterygius hercynicus (Kuhn 1946),
and of European Cretaceous ichthyosaurs in general. These include a wide frontal forming the
anteromedial border of the supratemporal fenestra, a parietal excluded from the parietal
foramen, and the likely presence of a squamosal, inferred from a very large and deep facet on
the quadratojugal. The absence of a squamosal has been considered as an autapomorphy of
the genus Platypterygius for more than ten years and has been applied to all known species by
default, but the described specimen casts doubt on this putative autapomorphy. Actually, it is
shown that all characters that have been proposed previously as autapomorphic for the genus
Platypterygius are either not found in all the species currently referred to this genus, or are
also present in other Ophthalmosauridae. Consequently, the genus Platypterygius must be
completely revised.Peer reviewe
A mixed-age classed ‘pelycosaur’ aggregation from South Africa: earliest evidence of parental care in amniotes?
Living species of mammals, crocodiles and most species of birds exhibit parental care, but evidence of this behaviour is extremely rare in the fossil record. Here, we present a new specimen of varanopid ‘pelycosaur’ from the Middle Permian of South Africa. The specimen is an aggregation, consisting of five articulated individuals preserved in undisturbed, close, lifelike, dorsal-up, subparallel positions, indicating burial in ‘life position’. Two size classes are represented. One is 50% larger than the others, is well ossified, has fused neurocentral sutures and is distinguished by a coat of dermal ossifications that covers the neck and shoulder regions. We regard this individual to be an adult. The remaining four skeletons are considered to be juveniles as they are approximately the same size, are poorly ossified, have open neurocentral sutures and lack dermal ossifications. Aggregates of juvenile amniotes are usually siblings. Extant analogues of adult and juvenile groupings suggest that the adult is one of the parents, leading us to regard the aggregation as a family group. The Late Middle Permian age of the varanopid family predates the previously known oldest fossil evidence of parental care in terrestrial vertebrates by 140 Myr
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