Biology:Atoposaurus

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Short description: Extinct genus of reptiles

Atoposaurus
Temporal range: Late Jurassic
Atoposaurus oberndorfi Teylers.JPG
Fossil of Atoposaurus oberndorferi in Teyler's Museum
Scientific classification e
Missing taxonomy template (fix): Archosauria/Reptilia
Clade: Pseudosuchia
Clade: Crocodylomorpha
Clade: Crocodyliformes
Family: Atoposauridae
Genus: Atoposaurus
von Meyer, 1850
Species
  • A. oberndorferi von Meyer, 1850 (type)
  • A. jourdani von Meyer, 1851

Atoposaurus is an extinct genus of crocodylomorph. It is the type genus of the family Atoposauridae. Fossils have been found that were Late Jurassic in age from two distinct species in France and Germany .

One interesting feature of Atoposaurus is that it lacked dorsal scutes, a common characteristic of atoposaurids as well as most crurotarsans. The absence of scutes, along with its relatively small size (specimens reach lengths of up to 17 cm), narrow supratemporal fossae, wide occipital region, thin postorbital bar, and smooth ornamentation,[1] has led some paleontologists to believe that it is perhaps a juvenile form of another genus within Atoposauridae, most likely Alligatorellus.[2]

History of the holotype

Atoposaurus oberndorferi

The Teylers Museum has a holotype specimen Atoposaurus oberndorfi that was bought by curator J.G.S. van Breda in 1863 from Adam August Krantz (1809-1872), dealer in minerals in Bonn from 1850 onwards. The purchase was made along with the other holotypes Sapheosaurus laticeps, Homeosaurus maximilliani, Rhamphorhynchus gemmingi, Pterodactylus longirostris and Pterodactylus meyeri, based on the book Zur Fauna der Vorwelt (1860) by Christian Erich Hermann von Meyer.[3]

References

  1. lordansky, N N ( 1973) The skull of the Crocodilia In Biology of the Reptilia, edited by Gans, C and Parsons, T S , pp 201-262 Academic Press, London and New York.
  2. Buscalioni, Angela D.; and Jose Luis Sanz (1988). Phylogenetic Relationships of the Atoposauridae (Archosauria, Crocodylomorpha). Historical Biology I: 233-250
  3. Research Bert Sliggers, conservator Paleontological cabinet Teylers Museum, 2012

External links

Wikidata ☰ Q4817431 entry