Lachlan J. Hart, B. Gee, Patrick M. Smith, M. McCurry
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
ABSTRACT Compared with other Mesozoic tetrapod groups, chigutisaurid fossils from Australia are rare, with only three named taxa described from the continent. From Queensland, Keratobrachyops australis is known from the Triassic, and Siderops kehli from the Jurassic. Koolasuchus cleelandi, from the Cretaceous of Victoria, represents the youngest-known temnospondyl globally. Here we describe the first chigutisaurid from New South Wales, from the Early–Middle Triassic Terrigal Formation. The specimen (AM F125866) comprises an articulated, near-complete skeleton, presented in ventral aspect, as well as outlines of soft tissue. The new taxon preserves features that indicate an affinity with Chigutisauridae, confirming previous hypotheses on the presence of large-bodied chigutisaurids in the Triassic of Australia. The new Terrigal chigutisaurid is only the second chigutisaurid known from the Lower Triassic and fourth from Australia overall. The distribution of brachycephalic temnospondyls throughout the Mesozoic suggests specific adaptations led to the long-term survival of chigutisaurids, especially across the end-Triassic extinction event.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology publishes original contributions on all aspects of vertebrate paleobiology, including vertebrate origins, evolution, functional morphology, taxonomy, biostratigraphy, phylogenetics, paleoecology, paleobiogeography, and paleoanthropology. JVP publishes high quality peer-reviewed original articles, occasional reviews, and interdisciplinary papers. It is international in scope, and emphasizes both specimen- and field-based based research and the use of high-quality illustrations. Priority is given to articles dealing with topics of broad interest to the entire vertebrate paleontology community and to high-impact specialist studies. Articles dealing with narrower topics, including notes on taxonomic name changes (unless these deal with errors published in JVP), preliminary site reports, and documentation of new specimens of well-known taxa, are afforded lower priority.