The evolution of the lepidosaurian lower temporal bar: new perspectives from the Late Cretaceous of South China

Until recently, it was considered axiomatic that the skull of lizards and snakes arose from that of a diapsid ancestor by loss of the lower temporal bar. The presence of the bar in the living New Zealand Tuatara, Sphenodon, was thus considered primitive, corroborating its status as a 'living fo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 2010-01, Vol.277 (1679), p.331-336
Hauptverfasser: Mo, Jin-You, Xu, Xing, Evans, Susan E.
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creator Mo, Jin-You
Xu, Xing
Evans, Susan E.
description Until recently, it was considered axiomatic that the skull of lizards and snakes arose from that of a diapsid ancestor by loss of the lower temporal bar. The presence of the bar in the living New Zealand Tuatara, Sphenodon, was thus considered primitive, corroborating its status as a 'living fossil'. A combination of new fossils and rigorous phylogeny has demonstrated unequivocally that the absence of the bar is the primitive lepidosaurian condition, prompting questions as to its function. Here we describe new material of Tianyusaurus, a remarkable lizard from the Late Cretaceous of China that is paradoxical in having a complete lower temporal bar and a fixed quadrate. New material from Jiangxi Province is more complete and less distorted than the original holotype. Tianyusaurus is shown to be a member of the Boreoteiioidea, a successful clade of large herbivorous lizards that were dispersed through eastern Asia, Europe and North America in the Late Cretaceous, but disappeared in the end-Cretaceous extinction. A unique combination of characters suggests that Tianyusaurus took food items requiring a large gape.
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source MEDLINE; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; PubMed Central
subjects Animals
Biological Evolution
Boreoteiioid
China
Fossils
Holotypes
Jaw
Lacertilia
Lizard
Lizards
Lizards - anatomy & histology
Lizards - classification
Lower Temporal Bar
Materials
Maxilla
Phylogeny
Reptiles
Skull
Skull - anatomy & histology
Sphenodon
Taxa
Teeth
Tianyusaurus
title The evolution of the lepidosaurian lower temporal bar: new perspectives from the Late Cretaceous of South China
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