Pleurosaurus

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Pleurosaurus
Temporal range:
Ma
P. sp., National Taiwan Museum
Skull diagram
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Rhynchocephalia
Family: Pleurosauridae
Genus: Pleurosaurus
Meyer, 1831
Type species
Pleurosaurus goldfussi
Meyer, 1831
Species
  • P. goldfussi Meyer, 1831
  • P. ginsburgi Fabre, 1974

Pleurosaurus (from

extinct genus of aquatic reptiles belonging to the order Rhynchocephalia. Pleurosaurus fossils have primarily been discovered in the Solnhofen Limestone of Bavaria, Germany and the Canjuers lagerstatte near Canjuers, France, both dating to the Late Jurassic. It contains two species, P. goldfussi and P. ginsburgi.[1]

History of discovery

Pleurosaurus was first described from the Solnhofen Limestone by Christian Erich Hermann von Meyer in 1834, based on the species Pleurosaurus goldfussi. In 1970 fossils were reported from the lithographic limestones in a quarry near the village of Aiguines in the Canjuers plateau, France. In 1974, Pleurosaurus ginsburgi was described based on MNHN 1983-4-CNJ 67, a mostly complete skeleton found at the Aiguines quarry.[1] Pleurosaurus is one of two unambiguous members of the family Pleurosauridae, alongside Palaeopleurosaurus from the Early Jurassic of Germany.[1] In 2012, fragmentary remains likely belonging to P. goldfussi were reported from central Poland.[2]

Description

Restoration of Pleurosaurus goldfussi

Pleurosaurus is one of the few known

anguilliform locomotion), while it probably used its limbs to steer. It lived in shallow marine environments, and was probably piscivorous.[4] Pleurosaurus goldfussi and Pleurosaurus ginsburgi are distinguished by differing skull proportions, different numbers of presacral vertebrae (50 in P. goldfussi vs 57 in P. ginsburgi), and considerably shorter forelimbs on P. ginsburgi.[1]

  • P. goldfussi
    P. goldfussi
  • P. goldfussi
    P. goldfussi
  • P. ginsburgi
    P. ginsburgi

References

  1. ^ a b c d Dupret, V. (2004). The pleurosaurs: anatomy and phylogeny. Revue de Paléobiologie, 9: 61-80.[1]
  2. ISSN 0024-1164
    .
  3. ^ Michael Benton, Vertebrate Paleontology 2009 p. 455 (3rd Edition)
  4. S2CID 27133670
    .