Embrithosaurus

Embrithosaurus
Temporal range: Capitanian, 265–260 Ma
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Procolophonomorpha
Family: Pareiasauridae
Genus: Embrithosaurus
Watson, 1914
Type species
Embrithosaurus schwarzi
Watson, 1914
Species
  • E. alexanderi Haughton and Boonstra, 1929
  • E. schwarzi Watson, 1914
  • E. strubeni Broom, 1924
Synonyms
  • Brachypareia watsoni Haughton and Boonstra, 1929
  • Bradysaurus strubeni Boonstra, 1969
  • Bradysaurus watsoni Haughton and Boonstra, 1929
  • Dolichopareia angusta Haughton and Boonstra, 1929
  • Embrithosaurus angustus Haughton and Boonstra, 1929
  • Nochelesaurus angustus Haughton and Boonstra, 1929
  • Pareiasaurus bombidens Seeley, 1888

Embrithosaurus was a pareiasaur from the Permian time period.It was from South Africa.[1]

Description

Embrithosaurus was 3 meters in length and 600 kg in weight.The skull is relatively deep and narrow. The body is lightly armoured with thin, smooth dermal scutes.

Species

E. alexanderi (Haughton and Boonstra, 1929); this species was made the type for " Dolichopareia". As the name indicates, the skull is long and narrow. This would seem to indicate a different lifestyle or diet to other parieasaurs. More recently, it has been used as the monotypal species for the genus Nochelesaurus (it is not clear what the status of Embrithosaurus strubeni is, this may be a further transitional species). In cladistic analyses, this species is phylogenetically intermediate between Bradysaurus seeleyi and Embrithosaurus schwarzi .

E. schwarzi (Watson, 1914);the type species. This is the most advanced species of this genus, as indicated by the teeth, which have nine cusps (in three groups of three). In cladistic analyses it is used as the monotypal species for the genus.

E. strubeni (Broom, 1924);the skull is large and deep, pointed at the front, and elevated in the jugal region. This species was originally made the type species of Nochelosaurus by Haughton and Boonstra. Boonstra later (1969) moved it into the genus Bradysaurus, on the basis of the primitive tooth structure. Kuhn however considers it belongs under Embrithosaurus.


References

External links

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