4.1 Article

EOTHYRIS AND OEDALEOPS: DO THESE EARLY PERMIAN SYNAPSIDS FROM TEXAS AND NEW MEXICO FORM A CLADE?

Journal

JOURNAL OF VERTEBRATE PALEONTOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 1, Pages 39-47

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1671/039.029.0112

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Humboldt Foundation
  3. Board of Commissioners-Calvert County, Maryland

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The monospecific genera Eothyris (Petrolia Formation, Leonardian, Archer County, Texas) and Oedaleops (Abo/Cutler Formation, Wolfcampian, Rio Arriba County, New Mexico), known solely from cranial remains, are confidently assigned to the monophyletic Caseasauria based oil cranial and dental characters. In addition, Eothyris and Oedaleops comprise the monophyletic Eothyrididae based on nine cranial and dental characters. In contrast to the medium to large sized herbivorous caseids, the small eothyridids exhibit dental features that indicate that they were faunivores. The presence of well-developed caniniform teeth suggests that they were predators. Both Eothyris parkeyi Romer and Oedaleops campi Langston exhibit a Suite of plesiomorphic cranial characters that identify them as basal synapsids. Thus, the eothyridids are better representatives of the primitive synapsid cranial morphotype than the often-used ophiacodontids. Although they appear relatively late in synapsid evolution, both eothyridids are significantly older than all other caseasaurs, forcing the establishment of a long unrecorded lineage for caseids.

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