This list of fossil reptiles described in 2024 is a list of new taxa of fossil reptiles that were described during the year 2024, as well as other significant discoveries and events related to reptile paleontology that occurred in 2024.
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Squamates
editName | Novelty | Status | Authors | Age | Type locality | Country | Notes | Images |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gen. et sp. nov |
In press |
Carvalho & Santucci |
Early Cretaceous (Aptian) |
A member of Polyglyphanodontia. The type species is C. pachysymphysealis. Announced in 2023; the final article version will be published in 2024. |
||||
Gen. et sp. nov |
Valid |
Daza et al. |
Cretaceous (Albian/Cenomanian) |
Burmese amber |
A skink. The type species is E. zedi. |
|||
Sp. nov |
In press |
Shaker et al. |
Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) |
A mosasaur belonging to the subfamily Halisaurinae. Announced in 2023; the final article version will be published in 2024. | ||||
Gen. et sp. nov |
Croghan et al. |
Oligocene (Rupelian) |
A member of Booidea of uncertain affinities. The type species is H. breithaupti. |
|||||
Khinjaria[5] | Gen. et sp. nov | In press | Longrich et al. | Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) | Ouled Abdoun Basin | Morocco | A mosasaur belonging to the subfamily Plioplatecarpinae. The type species is K. acuta. | |
Segurasaurus[6] | Gen. et comb. nov | Berrocal-Casero et al. | Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian) | Tentúgal Formation | Portugal | A member of Pythonomorpha. The type species is "Carentonosaurus" soaresi. | ||
Vasuki[7] | Gen. et sp. nov | Valid | Datta & Bajpai | Middle Eocene (Lutetian) | Naredi Formation | India | A member of Madtsoiidae. The type species is V. indicus. | |
Sp. nov |
Valid |
Rivera-Sylva et al. |
Late Cretaceous (Turonian-Coniacian) |
A mosasaur belonging to the subfamily Plioplatecarpinae. Announced in 2023; the final article version was published in 2024. |
Squamate research
edit- A study on the biogeography of squamates throughout their evolutionary history, providing evidence of a localized Pangaean origin (Africa, Australia, Eurasia and Sunda) of the squamate crown group in the Jurassic followed by strong regionalization to Eurasia for subsequent Jurassic lineages, is published by Wilenzik, Barger & Pyron (2024).[9]
- New lizard assemblage, including fossil material of a pleurodontan iguanian, a teiioid and a possible scincoid, is described from the Upper Cretaceous (Campanian-Maastrichtian) Allen Formation (Argentina) by Garberoglio et al. (2024).[10]
- Revision of the fossil material of Paleocene lizards from the Walbeck fissure filling (Saxony-Anhalt, Germany) is published by Čerňanský & Vasilyan (2024), who interpret Camptognathosaurus parisiensis as a junior synonym of Glyptosaurus walbeckensis, resulting in a new combination Camptognathosaurus walbeckensis, tentatively assign C. walbeckensis to the family Lacertidae, and interpret fossils of Parasauromalus paleocenicus as belonging to an indeterminate lacertid.[11]
- Čerňanský (2024) describes probable fossil material of the European green lizard from the Węże I locality in Poland, providing evidence of large geographic distribution of green lizards in Europe during the Pliocene.[12]
- An iguanian skull from the Paleogene White River Formation (Wyoming, United States), tentatively assigned to the species Aciprion formosum, is interpreted as the oldest and first definitive stem member of Crotaphytidae by Scarpetta (2024); the author also interprets Polrussia mongoliensis as possible member of the crown group of Pleurodonta, Magnuviator ovimonsensis as a possible stem pleurodontan and Afairiguana avius as a possible anole.[13]
- De Queiroz et al. (2024) describe a probable juvenile anole specimen from the Dominican amber, and identify it as a trunk anole likely related to extant Anolis distichus.[14]
- Čerňanský et al. (2024) describe glyptosaurid, palaeovaranid and varanid fossils from the earliest Eocene strata from the Dormaal site (Belgium) and transfer ?Placosaurus ragei to the glyptosaurid genus Gaultia, representing the first record of this genus outside North America.[15]
- Revision of the fossil material and a study on the affinities of Pseudopus pannonicus is published by Loréal, Georgalis & Čerňanský (2024), who interpret the majority of large anguids from the Neogene of Europe as junior synonyms of P. pannonicus.[16]
- Donato et al. (2024) identify skull remains of a Middle Pleistocene monitor lizard from Naracoorte's Fossil Chamber (Victoria Fossil Cave, Australia) as fossil material of the lace monitor.[17]
- Garzon et al. (2024) describe an incomplete maxilla from the Turonian to Coniacian Middle Napo Formation of the Napo Group, representing the first finding of a mosasaurid from the Upper Cretaceous strata from Ecuador.[18]
- Allemand et al. (2024) present reconstructions of brain endocasts of three specimens of Tethysaurus nopcsai, providing evidence of different endocranial organizations in Tethysaurus, Platecarpus and Clidastes, and find no evidence of closer endocranial resemblance of Tethysaurus to monitor lizards than other toxicoferans.[19]
- Páramo-Fonseca et al. (2024) describe well-preserved chondrocranial elements of a mosasaur specimen from the Coniacian Galembo Formation (Colombia), indicating that chondrocranium of mosasaurs was more reduced than in most lizards, but not as severely as in snakes and amphisbaenians, and that its reduction might have been related to the modification of limbs by adaptation to aquatic life.[20]
- The oldest fossil material of Platecarpus from Europe reported to date, as well as fossil material of Tylosaurus sp, is described from the Santonian localities in the Sougraigne area (Aude Department, France) by Plasse et al. (2024).[21]
- Grigoriev, Zverkov & Nikiforov (2024) describe mosasaur remains from the Campanian strata from the Izhberda locality, including the first records of members of the subfamilies Tylosaurinae (including Taniwhasaurus, expanding known geographical range of the genus), Mosasaurinae and Plioplatecarpinae from the Upper Cretaceous strata from the Orenburg Oblast (Russia).[22]
- Rempert, Martens & Vinkeles Melchers (2024) describe new fossil material of mosasaurs from the Upper Cretaceous strata in Mississippi (United States), providing evidence of the presence of Mosasaurus hoffmannii during the Maastrichtian and of cf. Platecarpus, an unnamed species of Plioplatecarpus from the Demopolis Chalk and probably of Tylosaurus sp. during the Campanian.[23]
- A study on a skull of a specimen of Plioplatecarpus from the Campanian Bearpaw Shale (Alberta, Canada) preserved with a sclerotic ring is published by Holmes (2024), who interprets Plioplatecarpus as having a stereoscopic vision and capable of tracking quickly moving objects in light-poor conditions.[24]
- López-Rueda et al. (2024) describe new mosasaur material from the Upper Cretaceous Labor-Tierna and Plaeners formations (Colombia), including the first record of a member of the genus Globidens from northern South America reported to date.[25]
- Rempert, Martens & Vinkeles Melchers (2024) report the discovery of new mosasaur material from the Maastrichtian Peedee Formation (North Carolina, United States), including fossils of members of species associated with the northern and southern margin of the Mediterranean Tethys (Prognathodon cf. solvayi and Mosasaurus cf. beaugei), extending their known geographical range.[26]
- Aniny et al. (2024) describe a trunk vertebra of Palaeophis cf. africanus from the Eocene deposits of the El Breij Depression (Western Sahara), expanding known geographical range of the species.[27]
- Natarajan et al. (2024) describe new fossil material of Pterosphenus schucherti from the Eocene (Bartonian) Harudi Formation (India), and interpret the species P. biswasi and P. schweinfurthi as junior synonyms of P. schucherti.[28]
- Garberoglio, Gómez & Caldwell (2024) describe fossil material of a large-bodied (estimated to be around 8 meters in total length) snake distinct from Titanoboa from the Paleocene Cerrejón Formation (Colombia) interpreted by the authors as an undetermined palaeophiine.[29]
- Flores et al. (2024) describe remains of a snake belonging to the genus Lampropeltis from the probable Pleistocene strata from the McFaddin Beach (Texas, United States), providing the first evidence of presence of members of this genus on the Texan coast in the Pleistocene.[30]
- Villa et al. (2024) describe vertebrae of indeterminate cobras from middle–late Miocene localities in the Vallès-Penedès Basin (Catalonia, Spain), providing evidence of presence of cobras in the Iberian Peninsula before the Messinian salinity crisis.[31]
- The first known snake assemblage from early Clarendonian in North America is reported from the Penny Creek Local Fauna (Ash Hollow Formation; Nebraska, United States) by Jacisin & Lawing (2024), who interpret the studied fossils as indicative of a woodland-prairie environment with a permanent stream or river as a local water source.[32]
- ElShafie (2024) presents novel methods which can be used to determine body size from isolated lizard bones and applies these methods to a sample of lizard bones from the Paleogene of North America.[33]
- Ledesma et al. (2024) revise fossil material of late Pleistocene and Holocene lizards from Hall's Cave (Texas, United States), adding five new taxa to the known diversity of the cave fauna, and establish a procedure for making well-supported identifications for North American lizard fossils.[34]
Ichthyosauromorphs
editName | Novelty | Status | Authors | Age | Type locality | Country | Notes | Images |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Argovisaurus[35] | Gen. et sp. nov | Miedema et al. | Middle Jurassic (Bajocian-Bathonian) | Hauptrogenstein Formation | Switzerland | An ichthyosaur closely related to Ophthalmosauria. The type species is A. martafernandezi. | ||
Gen. et sp. nov |
Valid |
Lomax et al. |
Late Triassic (Rhaetian) |
Possibly a member of the family Shastasauridae. The type species is I. severnensis. |
||||
Sp. nov |
Valid |
Fang, Wolniewicz & Liu |
Middle Triassic (Anisian) |
|||||
Platypterygius elsuntuoso[38] | Sp. nov | Fonseca, Cabra, & Camacho | Early Cretaceous (Barremian) | Paja Formation | Colombia |
Ichthyosauromorph research
edit- Liu, Wu & Qiao (2024) describe a new hupehsuchian specimen from the Lower Triassic strata in South China, identified as a new morphotype of Nanchangosaurus and preserving the first known fossil material of palate, zeugopodium and autopodium of Nanchangosaurus.[39]
- Evidence from experiments with soft robotic models, indicative of a direct correlation between fin shape and the pitch torque generated while swimming in ichthyosauriforms, is presented by Sprumont et al. (2024).[40]
- Ye et al. (2024) reevaluate the age of Thaisaurus chonglakmanii, interpreting it as a late Spathian taxon.[41]
- Gu, Wolniewicz & Liu (2024) describe a new specimen of Chaohusaurus zhangjiawanensis, providing new information on the dentition of this species, interpreted as indicating that C. zhangjiawanensis was likely capable of feeding on harder and larger prey than C. brevifemoralis and C. chaoxianensis.[42]
- A study on bone arrangement in ichthyosaur fins throughout their evolutionary history, providing evidence of the presence of a broad array of connectivity patterns, is published by Fernández et al. (2024).[43]
- Sander et al. (2024) describe vertebrae of a member of the genus Cymbospondylus from the Olenekian Vikinghøgda Formation (Svalbard, Norway), interpreted as likely belonging to an animal with a total length between 7.5 m and 9.5 m.[44]
- Fossil material of medium- to large-sized probable ichthyopterygians is described from the Anisian strata in South Primorye (Russia) by Zakharov et al. (2024).[45]
- Redescription of the anatomy of the postcranial skeleton of Besanosaurus leptorhynchus is published by Bindellini et al. (2024), who interpret this taxon as having body profile and swimming style intermediate between anguilliform swimmers such as Cymbospondylus and shastasaur-grade ichthyosaurs.[46]
- Putative bone fragments of large-bodied dinosaurs from Rhaetian strata in France, Germany and United Kingdom are reinterpreted as fossil material of large-bodied ichthyosaurs by Perillo & Sander (2024).[47]
- Description of Early Jurassic ichthyosaur specimens from the collection of fossils amassed by Charles Moore is published by Massare et al. (2024).[48]
- Description of the skeletal anatomy (including the first record of an open medullary cavity on the ribs of an Early Jurassic ichthyosaur) and soft tissues of an immature ichthyosaur specimen (possibly a member of the genus Stenopterygius) from the Toarcian strata of the "Schistes Carton" unit (Luxembourg) is published by Bonnevier Wallstedt et al. (2024), who also study the taphonomy of the specimen.[49]
- Campos et al. (2024) redescribe the holotype of Myobradypterygius hauthali, interpreting this species as phylogenetically distant from species belonging to the genus Platypterygius, and consider Myobradypterygius to be a distinct genus.[50]
- Pardo-Pérez et al. (2024) describe new fossil material of Myobradypterygius hauthali from the Hauterivian strata in the Torres del Paine National Park (Chile), expanding known distribution of the species and providing evidence of anatomical differences between M. hauthali and Platypterygius platydactylus supporting the classification of Myobradypterygius as a distinct genus; the authors also describe fossil material of a member of the subfamily Ophthalmosaurinae from the same locality, representing the southernmost record of the subfamily reported to date.[51]
- Yakupova & Akhmedenov (2024) describe fossil material of a member of the genus Platypterygius from the Albian strata from the Mangystau region (Kazakhstan).[52]
- Young et al. (2024) describe fossil material of a platypterygiid (probably more closely related to Platypterygius australis than to the Cretaceous ichthyosaurs from western Gondwana) from the Cenomanian strata of the Swale Member of the Split Rock Formation (New Zealand).[53]
- Review of the fossil record of ichthyosaurs from Switzerland is published by Klug et al. (2024).[54]
Sauropterygians
editName | Novelty | Status | Authors | Age | Type locality | Country | Notes | Images |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sp. nov |
Hu, Li, & Liu |
|||||||
Gen. et sp. nov |
Valid |
Sachs, Eggmaier & Madzia |
A basal plesiosauroid. The type species is F. brevispinus. |
|||||
Marambionectes[57] | Gen. et sp. nov | O'Gorman et al. | Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) | Lopez de Bertodano Formation | Antarctica | An elasmosaurid. The type species is M. molinai. | ||
Gen. et comb. nov |
In press |
Clark, O'Keefe, & Slack |
A polycotylid. The type species is "Dolichorhynchops" bonneri. Announced in 2023; the final article version will be published in 2024. |
|||||
Gen. et comb. nov |
In press |
Clark, O'Keefe, & Slack |
Late Cretaceous (Turonian) |
A polycotylid. The type species is "Dolichorhynchops" tropicensis. Announced in 2023; the final article version will be published in 2024. |
||||
Gen. et sp. nov |
In press |
Clark, O'Keefe, & Slack |
Late Cretaceous (Campanian) |
A polycotylid. The type species is U. specta. Announced in 2023; the final article version will be published in 2024. |
Sauropterygian research
edit- A study on tooth wear patterns in Middle and Late Triassic placodonts from Europe, interpreted as suggestive of different diet composition of the studied placodonts (with some taxa unlikely to feed solely on hard-shelled animals), is published by Gere et al. (2024).[59]
- Kear et al. (2024) describe a nothosaur vertebra from the Anisian Balmacaan Formation (New Zealand), representing the oldest sauropterygian record from the Southern Hemisphere reported to date.[60]
- Description of the anatomy of the postcranial skeleton of Paludidraco multidentatus is published by Cabezuelo-Hernández et al. (2024).[61]
- A study on the tooth replacement in Maresaurus coccai, and on its implications for reconstructions of changes of the tooth replacement cycle period of plesiosaurs throughout their evolutionary history, is published by Matelo Mirco, O'Gorman & Gasparini (2024).[62]
- Vincent et al. (2024) describe a new specimen of Liopleurodon ferox from the Middle Jurassic (Callovian) from the Grève Quarry (Vienne, France), and interpret its anatomy as confirming that the lack of fusion between centra and neural arches of the cervical vertebrae is not a trait exclusive to juvenile pliosaurids, and might also be a paedomorphic feature of adult specimens.[63]
- Alhalabi et al. (2024) describe fossil material of an elasmosaurid from the Coniacian-Santonian Rmah Formation (Syria), representing the most complete plesiosaur specimen from the Middle East reported to date and likely the oldest Cretaceous plesiosaur from the Middle East.[64]
- A study on the histology of the vertebrae of Vegasaurus molyi from different sections of the vertebral column is published by Talevi, Garat & Fernández (2024).[65]
- O'Gorman (2024) studies the neck elongation pattern in Elasmosaurus platyurus, taking the taphonomic distortion into account, and presents a new scheme of neck elongation patterns in plesiosaurs with a long neck and small skull.[66]
- Zverkov et al. (2024) redescribe Polycotylus sopozkoi and confirm its status as a distinct species within the genus Polycotylus.[67]
- Henderson (2024) provides estimates of the original masses and shape characteristics of incompletely preserved gastroliths found with Cretaceous plesiosaur specimens from Alberta (Canada), and interprets the estimated amounts of gastroliths as unlikely to work effectively as ballast.[68]
- A study on swimming patterns of plesiosaurs, based on experiments with a robotic model, is published by Fukuhara et al. (2024).[69]
Turtles
editName | Novelty | Status | Authors | Age | Type locality | Country | Notes | Images |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sp. nov |
Pappa et al. |
Miocene |
||||||
Sp. nov |
Delfino et al. |
Pliocene |
Langebaanweg fossil site |
A tortoise, a species of Chersina. |
||||
Gen. et. sp. nov |
Valid |
Pérez-García & Antunes |
A pancheloniid turtle. The type species is L. emilianoi | |||||
Sp. nov |
Valid |
Ferreira et al. |
Late Pleistocene-Early Holocene |
A podocnemidid turtle. A giant extinct species of Peltocephalus, represented today only by P. dumerilianus. |
||||
Gen. et sp. nov |
Valid |
Zvonok, Panteleev & Danilov |
Eocene (Bartonian) |
A pan-cheloniid. The type species is P. shorymensis. |
||||
Gen. et sp. nov |
Valid |
Ke et al. |
Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) |
A member of the family Nanhsiungchelyidae. The type species is X. yingliangi. |
Turtle research
edit- Pereira et al. (2024) provide evidence of two peaks in extinction rates in the evolutionary history of turtles, with the first peak coinciding with the Cretaceous-Paleogene transition, and the second one (possibly caused by hominin activities) beginning in and continuing since the Pliocene.[76]
- A study on the osteological variation among the humeri of extant turtles, Proganochelys quenstedtii, Proterochersis porebensis and Palaeochersis talampayensis is published by Hermanson et al. (2024).[77]
- A study on shells of Proganochelys and Proterochersis is published by Ferreira et al. (2024), who interpret their findings as indicating that the main function of the attachment of turtle pelvis to the shell was not strengthening of the shell, and interpret Proterochersis as likely aquatic.[78]
- Redescription of the anatomy of the skull of Heckerochelys romani is published by Obraztsova, Sukhanov & Danilov (2024).[79]
- A study on the biomechanical performance of the skull Niolamia argentina of is published by Degrange et al. (2024), who interpret the frill and horns of N. argentina as more likely used for display than for combat.[80]
- Sterli et al. (2024) describe fossil material of a new turtle taxon from the Cenomanian Piedra Clavada Formation (Argentina), with a distinctive morphology indicating that it belongs to a previously unrecognized lineage of turtles, and representing the oldest Late Cretaceous turtle from the southernmost part of South America reported to date.[81]
- Tong et al. (2024) describe new shell material of Phunoichelys thirakhupti and Kalasinemys prasarttongosothi from the Phu Noi site (Thailand), providing new information on the anatomy of the studied turtles.[82]
- Pérez-García & Rubio (2024) describe a carapace of Algorachelus cf. peregrina from the Albian or Cenomanian Boundary Marls Unit of the Utrillas Group (Spain), representing the oldest bothremydid from Laurasia reported to date.[83]
- Cadena et al. (2024) describe new fossil material of Puentemys mushaisaensis from the Paleogene Arcillolitas de Socha Formation (Boyacá Department, Colombia), expanding known geographical range of the species, and interpret its presence in both Arcillolitas de Socha Formation and the Cerrejón Coal Mine as indicative of connectivity of coastal and inland ecosystems in northern South America during the late Paleocene to early Eocene.[84]
- Sena et al. (2024) study the microstructure of shells of Bauruemys elegans and other members of Pelomedusoides from the Upper Cretaceous and Paleogene strata in southern Brazil, and interpret their findings as consistent with an aquatic to semi-aquatic lifestyle of the studied turtles, as well as supporting the interpretation of the turtle carapace as originating endoskeletally from ribs and vertebral arches.[85]
- Maniel (2024) describes fossil material of members of Podocnemidoidea from the Santonian Bajo de la Carpa Formation (Argentina), preserving a scute scheme different from those of other turtles from the studied formation, and revises the diversity of Pelomedusoides from the Upper Cretaceous Neuquén Group, finding evidence for three different stages of their evolution (the appearance of Bothremydidae in the Cenomanian, their coexistence with Podocnemidoidea from the late Turonian to the Coniacian, and the continued existence and diversification of Podocnemidoidea from the Santonian to the late Campanian).[86]
- New information on the shell anatomy of Neochelys zamorensis is presented by Pérez-García et al. (2024).[87]
- Pérez-García, Camilo & Ortega (2024) describe new fossil material of Selenemys lusitanica from the Upper Jurassic Bombarral and Sobral formations (Portugal), providing new information on the shell anatomy of this turtle.[88]
- Spicher, Lyson & Evers (2024) redescribe the anatomy of the skull of Saxochelys gilberti.[89]
- Tong et al. (2024) describe carapaces of members of the genus Nanhsiungchelys from the Upper Cretaceous of Ganzhou Basin (Jiangxi, China), extending known geographical distribution of the genus and providing new information on the morphology of its carapace.[90]
- Ke et al. (2024) describe fossil material of a member of the genus Nanhsiungchelys from the Upper Cretaceous of Ganzhou Basin (China) and reevaluate the holotype of N. yangi, providing evidence that the plastron of members of the genus Nanhsiungchelys was partially hollow.[91]
- Redescription of the anatomy of the skull of Allaeochelys libyca is published by Rollot, Evers & Joyce (2024).[92]
- Description of an isolated cranium of Axestemys infernalis, representing the first trionychid skull material from the Maastrichtian Lance Formation (Wyoming, United States), and a study on the phylogenetic affinities of A. infernalis is published by Ponstein et al. (2024).[93]
- Girard et al. (2024) describe new fossil material of Hutchemys rememdium from the Sentinel Butte and Bullion Creek formations of the Fort Union Group (North Dakota, United States), including the first known skull material of a member of the genus Hutchemys.[94]
- Redescription of the holotype and a study on the affinities of Nichollsemys baieri is published by Menon et al. (2024).[95]
- The first fossil marine turtle found with gastroliths preserved in its body cavity (a protostegid possibly belonging to the species Protosphargis veronensis) is described from the Turonian strata of Scaglia Rossa (Italy) by Serafini et al. (2024).[96]
- Bona et al. (2024) describe dermochelyid fossils from the Leticia Formation (Tierra del Fuego, Argentina), representing the first Eocene record of marine reptiles from the southern Atlantic coast of South America, and interpret this finding as indicating that Eocene dermochelyids, like extant leatherback sea turtle, were able to live in waters with a wide temperature gradient.[97]
- Ascarrunz & Joyce (2024) describe a plastron fragment of a turtle with affinities with "ptychogasterid" geoemydids from the Eocene Messel Formation (Germany), distinct from other turtle species described from this formation.[98]
- Evers & Al Iawati (2024) describe the anatomy of the skull of Stylemys nebrascensis, and interpret this species as a possible stem-representative of the gopher tortoise lineage.[99]
- Torres et al. (2024) interpret tortoise fossil material from the Late Pleistocene strata in Ecuador as belonging to the sister taxon of the Galápagos tortoises, and interpret the studied fossils as indicating that the ancestors of the Galápagos tortoises evolved large body size before reaching the Galápagos Islands from the South American continent.[100]
- A study on the evolutionary history of turtles from insular Southeast Asia is published by Claude et al. (2024), who confirm that Duboisemys isoclina was an endemic extinct taxon.[101]
Archosauriformes
editArchosaurs
editOther archosauriforms
editName | Novelty | Status | Authors | Age | Type locality | Country | Notes | Images |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gen. et sp. nov |
Sues, Spiekman & Schoch |
Middle Triassic (Anisian) |
A non-archosaurian archosauriform. The type species is M. angustifrons. |
Archosauriform research
edit- Sharma et al. (2024) describe new proterosuchid material from the Lower Triassic (Induan) Panchet Formation (India), consider fossil material of "Teratosaurus" bengalensis to likely belong to a proterosuchid, and find no evidence for the presence of more than one archosauromorph taxon in the upper Panchet Formation.[103]
- A study on jaw mechanics of Proterochampsa nodosa de Simão-Oliveira et al. (2024), who report that Proterochampsa was able to perform bite forces comparable to those of alligators, but also that its jaws were more susceptible to bending than jaws of alligators, as well as more prone to accumulate stresses resulting from muscle contraction than both alligators and false gharials.[104]
- LePore & McLain (2024) identify a specimen of Machaeroprosopus mccauleyi from the Chinle Formation with a sacrum including a sacralized first caudal vertebra, expanding known sacral count variation in phytosaurs.[105]
- Sander & Wellnitz (2024) describe a phytosaur osteoderm from the Upper Triassic strata in the Bonenburg clay pit (Contorta Beds of the Exter Formation; North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany) representing the youngest well-dated phytosaur fossil reported to date, and indicating that phytosaurs survived into the late middle Rhaetian, at most two million years before the end of the Triassic.[106]
Other reptiles
editName | Novelty | Status | Authors | Age | Type locality | Country | Notes | Images |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gen. et sp. nov |
Valid |
Agnolín et al. |
Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) |
A sphenodontid rhynchocephalian. The type species is A. mineri. Announced in 2023; the final article version was published in 2024. |
||||
Gen. et sp. nov |
Valid |
Silva-Neves et al. |
Late Triassic (Carnian) |
A member of the family Procolophonidae belonging to the subfamily Leptopleuroninae. The type species is C. primus. |
||||
Gen. et sp. nov |
Kligman, Sues & Melstrom |
Late Triassic (Carnian) |
A small-bodied reptile of uncertain affinities. The type species is I. virginiensis. |
|||||
Gen. et sp. nov |
Valid |
Reisz, Chatterjee & Modesto |
Late Permian |
Kundarum Formation |
A member of the family Captorhinidae belonging to the subfamily Moradisaurinae. The type species is I. kuttyi. |
|||
Gen. et sp. nov |
Valid |
Burch et al. |
Late Triassic (Norian) |
Chinle Formation |
A diapsid reptile of uncertain affinities. The type species is M. sonselaensis. |
|||
Notosphenos[112] | Gen. et sp. nov | Agnolín et al. | Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) | Chorrillo Formation | Argentina | A sphenodontid rhynchocephalian. The type species is N. finisterre. | ||
Sp. nov |
Jenkins et al. |
Late Triassic |
Chinle Formation | |||||
Parvosaurus[114] | Gen. et sp. nov | Freisem et al. | Late Triassic (Norian) | Arnstadt Formation | Germany | A rhynchocephalian. The type species is P. harudensis. | ||
Gen. et comb. nov |
Valid |
Jung & Sues |
Permian (Kungurian) |
A member of the family Captorhinidae belonging to the subfamily Moradisaurinae. The type species is "Captorhinikos" chozaensis Olson (1954). |
||||
Gen. et sp. nov |
Pugh et al. |
Late Triassic (Norian) |
Garita Creek Formation |
A member of Drepanosauromorpha. The type species is U. onyx. |
Other reptile research
edit- Redescription and a study on the affinities of Brouffia orientalis is published by Klembara et al. (2024).[117]
- A study on the microanatomy and replacement of teeth in mesosaurs is published by Carlisbino et al. (2024).[118]
- A study on the bone microstructure of Mesosaurus tenuidens, providing evidence of distinct life history trajectories in specimens collected from different outcrops, is published by Carlisbino et al. (2024).[119]
- Redescription and a study on the phylogenetic affinities of Bolosaurus major is published by Jenkins et al. (2024).[120]
- New information on the skull anatomy of Soturnia caliodon and its intraspecific variation, based on the study of the skull of an immature individual, is presented by Dalle Laste et al. (2024).[121]
- New information on the anatomy of the skull of Emeroleter levis is presented by Bazzana-Adams, MacDougall & Fröbisch (2024), who also study the phylogenetic relationships of nycteroleterids.[122]
- A study on the chronological sequence of late Permian localities in Eastern Europe preserving pareiasaur osteoderms is published by Golubev, Naumcheva & Boyarinova (2024).[123]
- Redescription of the anatomy of the skull and a study on the affinities of Nanoparia luckhoffi is published by Van den Brandt et al. (2024).[124]
- Mooney et al. (2024) describe a skeleton of Captorhinus aguti from the Richards Spur locality (Oklahoma, United States), preserved with integumentary structures interpreted as remnants of the epidermis, and showing surface morphologies of the skin consistent with variation in most extant and extinct reptiles.[125]
- Buffa et al. (2024) propose a new reconstruction of the skull and mandible of Avicranium renestoi and study the affinities of weigeltisaurids and drepanosauromorphs, recovering the former group as stem-saurian diapsids and the latter group as the sister taxon of trilophosaurids within Archosauromorpha.[126]
- Beccari et al. (2024) describe a juvenile specimen of Pleurosaurus cf. P. ginsburgi from the Tithonian Mörnsheim Formation (Germany), representing the first unambiguous post-hatchling juvenile of Pleurosaurus reported to date, and note its similarities with Acrosaurus which might be indicative of synonymy of the two genera.[127]
- A study on the bone histology of Priosphenodon avelasi, interpreted as indicative of alternation between periods of slow and fast growth, is published by Cavasin, Cerda & Apesteguía (2024).[128]
- Review of the fossil record, phylogenetic relationships and likely ecology of thalattosaurs is published by Bastiaans (2024).[129]
- Taxonomic revision of the genus Xinpusaurus is published by Maisch (2024), who considers X. suni and X. kohi to be valid species belonging to this genus, interprets X. bamaolinensis as a junior synonym of X. suni, and transfers X. xingyiensis to the genus Concavispina.[130]
- Redescription of Pachystropheus rhaeticus is published by Quinn et al. (2024), who identify this reptile as a member of Thalattosauria.[131]
- Redescription of the skeletal anatomy of Dinocephalosaurus orientalis is published by Spiekman et al. (2024), who interpret D. orientalis as adapted to more open waters than Tanystropheus hydroides, and consider the similarities between Dinocephalosaurus and Tanystropheus to be largely convergent.[132]
- Redescription of Trachelosaurus fischeri, interpreted as the first unambiguous Dinocephalosaurus-like archosauromorph found outside the Guanling Formation, is published by Spiekman et al. (2024), who consider the family Trachelosauridae to be the senior synonym of the family Dinocephalosauridae, and name a new clade of non-crocopodan archosauromorphs Tanysauria.[133]
- Rytel et al. (2024) study the internal anatomy of the cervival vertebrae of tanysaurians, and report evidence of adaptations to neck elongation that were unparalleled in other known animals.[134]
- A study on the shape variation in the cervical vertebrae of tanystropheids and related archosauromorphs, providing evidence of existence of modularity patterns in the necks of early archosauromorphs and evidence indicating that elongated necks of tanystropheids and archosaurs evolved in different ways, is published by Rytel et al. (2024).[135]
- A study on the bone histology of Ozimek volans, providing evidence of similarity of the histology of its long bones to those of small bats, is published by Konietzko-Meier et al. (2024).[136]
- Marsh, Sidor & Armour Smith (2024) report the discovery of an assemblage of remains of trilophosaurids (including Trilophosaurus phasmalophos), malerisaurine azendohsaurids and indeterminate allokotosaurians from the lowermost Revueltian strata from the Sonsela Member of the Chinle Formation (Arizona, United States), and interpret this finding as indicative of coexistence of trilophosaurids and malerisaurines in the southwestern United States for approximately 10 million years during the Carnian and Norian.[137]
- A study on the biogeography of allokotosaurians is published by Roig, Miño-Boilini & Ezcurra (2024), who identity the area of India and Tanzania as the ancestral area of Allokotosauria in general and azendohsaurids in particular, and identify eastern North America as the ancestral area of trilophosaurids.[138]
- Redescription and a study on the affinities of Malerisaurus robinsonae is published by Sengupta, Ezcurra & Bandyopadhyay (2024).[139]
- Redescription of the anatomy of the skull of Mesosuchus browni is published by Foster et al. (2024), who report evidence of the presence of a pneumatized maxilla and likely a well-developed vomeronasal system.[140]
- Battista et al. (2024) describe the first hyperodapedontine rhynchosaur material from the Carnian Santacruzodon Assemblage Zone (Brazil), filling a gap within the South American rhynchosaur distribution and providing evidence of faunal similarities with other regions of Gondwana (i.e. Madagascar).[141]
- Schiefelbein et al. (2024) describe a new specimen of "Hyperodapedon" sanjuanensis from the Upper Triassic Candelária Sequence of the Santa Maria Supersequence (Brazil), preserving delicate scleral ossicles and providing information on the visual adaptations of hyperodapedontine rhynchosaurs.[142]
- De-Oliveira et al. (2024) describe new postcranial material of Teyujagua paradoxa from the Lower Triassic Sanga do Cabral Formation (Brazil), providing evidence of a morphology intermediate between early archosauromorphs and proterosuchids.[143]
- Rossi et al. (2024) report that purported soft tissues of the holotype of Tridentinosaurus antiquus are actually manufactured pigment, indicating that the body outline is a forgery and the only real parts of the specimen are the hindlimbs and osteoderms, and consider the validity of the taxon to be doubtful.[144]
Reptiles in general
edit- Cawthorne, Whiteside & Benton (2024) describe Late Triassic reptile fossils from the Emborough, Batscombe and Highcroft quarries (Somerset, United Kingdom), including fossil material of a new crocodylomorph taxon similar to Saltoposuchus and other loricatan fossils, an ilium of Pachystropheus rhaeticus (interpreted by the authors as a thalattosaur rather than a choristodere) and fossils of a possible procolophonid, Kuehneosaurus latus, rhynchocephalians, a possible lepidosauromorph similar to Cryptovaranoides microlanius and trilophosaurids.[145]
- Laboury et al. (2024) compare the evolution of morphology and body size of ichthyopterygians and eosauropterygians from the Middle Triassic to the Early Jurassic, finding evidence of diversification into three clades with clearly distinct skull and teeth morphologies in the latter group but not in the former one, and finding no evidence for an abrupt macroevolutionary bottleneck of the studied groups near the Triassic-Jurassic boundary.[146]
- Reolid et al. (2024) review the evolution of marine reptiles during the Jurassic, focusing on the impact of the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event, and report evidence of diversification of thalattosuchian crocodylomorphs and stenopterygid ichthyosaurs in the early Toarcian, as well evidence of extinctions of other group that survived the Toarcian Oceanic Anoxic Event later during the Toarcian.[147]
- Zverkov et al. (2024) revise the fossil record of marine reptiles from the Callovian of European Russia, providing evidence of the presence of a relict rhomaleosaurid as well as ichthyosaurs and thalattosuchians distinct from Western European ones in the early Callovian, and evidence of exchange of marine reptile faunas between Western and Eastern European seas in the middle to late Callovian.[148]
- Foffa, Young & Brusatte (2024) study the morphological and functional variation of lower jaws of marine reptiles from the Oxford Clay and Kimmeridge Clay formations, providing evidence of convergence of members of distantly related groups to similar feeding strategies, and likely evidence of niche partitioning among coexisting reptiles.[149]
- A study on the orbit and eye size in fossil archosauromorphs is published by Lautenschlager et al. (2024), who find that the largest eyes relative to the skull length were mostly present in small taxa, that herbivorous species had on average both larger orbits and larger skulls than carnivores, that eyes which were large in absolute terms appeared predominantly in large-sized dinosaurs irrespective of their diet, and that different activity patterns cannot be determined on the basis of orbit size alone.[150]
- A study on the evolution of locomotion in archosauromorph reptiles is published by Shipley et al. (2024), who interpret their findings as indicative of greater range in limb form and locomotor modes of dinosaurs compared to other archosauromorph groups, and argue that the ability to adopt a wider variety of limb forms and modes might have given dinosaurs a competitive advantage over pseudosuchians.[151]
- A study on bite marks on bones of Hyperodapedon huxleyi from the Upper Triassic Lower Maleri Formation (India) is published by Chakraborty, Mukherjee & Ray (2024), who interpret the studied bite marks as likely produced by phytosaurs and dinosauriforms.[152]
- Doering et al. (2024) describe new fossil material of archosauromorph reptiles from the Niemeyer complex (Santa Maria Supersequence, Brazil), including the first records of a rhynchosaur (Teyumbaita sulcognathus), a saurischian dinosaur and a probable silesaurid from this locality, and interpret the rhynchosaur remains as indicating that the site dates close to the Carnian-Norian boundary.[153]
- LeBlanc et al. (2024) report that extant Komodo dragons maintain cutting edges of their teeth through iron-enriched coatings on their tooth serrations and tips, argue that iron sequestration is probably widespread in reptile enamels, but also find no evidence of iron coatings along theropod dinosaur tooth serrations, report that tyrannosaurid theropods had specialized, wavy enamel along their tooth serrations that likely supported the cutting edges of the teeth, and interpret these findings as either indicative of different feeding strategies of tyrannosaurids and Komodo dragons, or indicating that only large theropods had tooth enamel that was thick enough to significantly influence the mechanical wear of the tooth serrations.[154]
- New fossil material of reptiles, including two turtle, seven lizard and eight snake taxa, is described from the Miocene and Pliocene localities in Greece by Georgalis et al. (2024).[155]
References
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- ^ Garberoglio, F. F.; Gómez, R. O.; Apesteguía, S.; Rougier, G. W. (2024). "A Late Cretaceous lizard assemblage from the Allen Formation, northern Patagonia, Argentina". Historical Biology: An International Journal of Paleobiology: 1–13. doi:10.1080/08912963.2024.2344789.
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{{cite journal}}
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- ^ de Queiroz, K.; Huie, J. M.; Hammel, J. U.; Müller, P.; Baranov, V. (2024). "A New Fossil Anolis Lizard in Hispaniolan Amber: Ecomorphology and Systematics". Journal of Herpetology. 58 (1). 115391. doi:10.1670/23-058.
- ^ Čerňanský, A.; Smith, R.; Smith, T.; Folie, A. (2024). "Timing of intercontinental faunal migrations: Anguimorph lizards from the earliest Eocene (MP 7) of Dormaal, Belgium". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 201 (4). zlae082. doi:10.1093/zoolinnean/zlae082.
- ^ Loréal, E.; Georgalis, G. L.; Čerňanský, A. (2024). "Pseudopus pannonicus (Squamata), the largest known anguid lizard—Redescription of the type material and new specimens from the Neogene and Quaternary of Hungary and Poland". The Anatomical Record. doi:10.1002/ar.25525. PMID 38982846.
- ^ Donato, I.; Palci, A.; Hutchinson, M. N.; Reed, E. H. (2024). "Putting a Name to a Face: Using Geometric Morphometrics to Identify Middle Pleistocene Varanid Cranial Fossils From Naracoorte Caves". Journal of Herpetology. 58 (3). 121522. doi:10.1670/23-056.
- ^ Garzon, D. N.; Arellano, P.; Toro-Álava, J.; Román-Carrión, J. L.; Ordoñez, J. E.; Andrade, P.; Mendoza-Ochoa, C.; Ayala, P.; Oleas, M.; Vizcaino, A.; Jiménez-Orellana, N. M. (2024). "First record of a mosasaurid (Squamata: Mosasauridae) from the Upper Cretaceous of Ecuador". Spanish Journal of Palaeontology. doi:10.7203/sjp.29179.
- ^ Allemand, R.; Polcyn, M. J.; Houssaye, A.; Vincent, P.; López-Aguirre, C.; Bardet, N. (2024). "First Virtual Reconstruction of a Mosasaurid Brain Endocast: Description and Comparison of the Endocast of Tethysaurus nopcsai with Those of Extant Squamates". Diversity. 16 (9). 548. doi:10.3390/d16090548.
- ^ Páramo-Fonseca, M. E.; Narváez-Rincón, J. A.; Benavides-Cabra, C. D.; Yanez-Leaño, C. F. (2024). "Exceptional In Situ Preservation of Chondrocranial Elements in a Coniacian Mosasaurid from Colombia". Diversity. 16 (5). 285. doi:10.3390/d16050285.
- ^ Plasse, M.; Valentin, X.; Garcia, G.; Guinot, G.; Bardet, N. (2024). "New remains of Mosasauroidea (Reptilia, Squamata) from the Upper Cretaceous (Santonian) of Aude, southern France". Cretaceous Research. 157. 105823. Bibcode:2024CrRes.15705823P. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2023.105823. S2CID 266852358.
- ^ Grigoriev, D. V.; Zverkov, N. G.; Nikiforov, A. V. (2024). "Mosasaurs (Squamata: Mosasauridae) from the Upper Cretaceous of the Southern Urals". Paleontological Journal. 58 (4): 457–474. Bibcode:2024PalJ...58..457G. doi:10.1134/S0031030124600355.
- ^ Rempert, T. H.; Martens, B. P.; Vinkeles Melchers, A. P. M. (2024). "New mosasaur remains from the Upper Cretaceous of Mississippi". The Mosasaur. The Journal of the Delaware Valley Paleontological Society. 13: 79–90. doi:10.5281/zenodo.10472410.
- ^ Holmes, R. B. (2024). "Evaluation of the photosensory characteristics of the lateral and pineal eyes of Plioplatecarpus (Squamata, Mosasauridae) based on an exceptionally preserved specimen from the Bearpaw Shale (Campanian, Upper Cretaceous) of southern Alberta". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 43 (5). e2335174. doi:10.1080/02724634.2024.2335174.
- ^ López-Rueda, J. S.; Polcyn, M. J.; Lindgren, J.; Cruz-Guevara, L. E.; Rodríguez-Sañudo, A. S. (2024). "Mosasaur (Reptilia, Mosasauridae) remains from the Upper Cretaceous of Colombia, including the first occurrence of the genus Globidens". Cretaceous Research. 166. 105997. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2024.105997.
- ^ Rempert, T. H.; Martens, B. P.; Vinkeles Melchers, A. P. M. (2024). "Mosasaurs (Squamata: Mosasauridae) from the Late Cretaceous (Late Maastrichtian) of North Carolina, USA". Proceedings of the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences. 328 (3): 384–391. doi:10.31610/trudyzin/2024.328.3.384.
- ^ Aniny, F.; Georgalis, G. L.; Gingerich, P. D.; Zouhri, S. (2024). "Occurrence of the large aquatic snake Palaeophis cf. africanus (Serpentes, Palaeophiidae) in the middle Eocene of the Sabkha El Breij, southwestern Morocco". Historical Biology: An International Journal of Paleobiology: 1–6. doi:10.1080/08912963.2024.2352863.
- ^ Natarajan, A.; Dasgupta, S.; Rakshit, N.; Kashyap, Y. (2024). "Taxonomic revision of the giant marine snake genus Pterosphenus Lucas, 1898, based on new fossil material from the middle Eocene (Bartonian) Harudi Formation of Kachchh (Kutch) Basin, India". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 43 (6). e2375332. doi:10.1080/02724634.2024.2375332.
- ^ Garberoglio, F. F.; Gómez, R. O.; Caldwell, M. W. (2024). "New record of aquatic snakes (Squamata, Palaeophiidae) from the Paleocene of South America". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 43 (4). e2305892. doi:10.1080/02724634.2024.2305892.
- ^ Flores, D.; Meza, A.; Bell, C. J.; Skwarcan, S.; Godwin, W.; Fremont, J.; Lewis, P. J. (2024). "First fossil snake from McFaddin Beach, Texas, USA". Palaeontologia Electronica. 27 (2). 27.2.a37. doi:10.26879/1304.
- ^ Villa, A.; Quadros, A. B.; Delfino, M.; Luján, À. H.; Bolet, A.; Casanovas-Vilar, I.; Robles, J. M.; Alba, D. M. (2024). "The rise and fall of the Iberian cobras (Elapidae, Naja) in the context of their European and global fossil record". Papers in Palaeontology. 10 (4). e1575. Bibcode:2024PPal...10E1575V. doi:10.1002/spp2.1575.
- ^ Jacisin, J. J.; Lawing, A. M. (2024). "Fossil snakes of the Penny Creek Local Fauna from Webster County, Nebraska, USA, and the first record of snakes from the Early Clarendonian (12.5-12 Ma) of North America". Palaeontologia Electronica. 27 (1). 27.1.2A. doi:10.26879/1220.
- ^ ElShafie, S. J. (2024). "Body size estimation from isolated fossil bones reveals deep time evolutionary trends in North American lizards". PLOS ONE. 19 (1). e0296318. Bibcode:2024PLoSO..1996318E. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0296318. PMC 10769094. PMID 38180961.
- ^ Ledesma, D. T.; Scarpetta, S. G.; Jacisin, J. J.; Meza, A.; Kemp, M. E. (2024). "Identification of Late Pleistocene and Holocene fossil lizards from Hall's Cave (Kerr County, Texas) and a primer on morphological variation in North American lizard skulls". PLOS ONE. 19 (8). e0308714. Bibcode:2024PLoSO..1908714L. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0308714. PMC 11326655. PMID 39146299.
- ^ Miedema, Feiko; Bastiaans, Dylan; Scheyer, Torsten M.; Klug, Christian; Maxwell, Erin E. (2024-03-16). "A large new Middle Jurassic ichthyosaur shows the importance of body size evolution in the origin of the Ophthalmosauria". BMC Ecology and Evolution. 24 (1): 34. Bibcode:2024BMCEE..24...34M. doi:10.1186/s12862-024-02208-3. ISSN 2730-7182. PMC 10944604. PMID 38493100.
- ^ Lomax, D. R.; de la Salle, P.; Perillo, M.; Reynolds, J.; Reynolds, R.; Waldron, J. F. (2024). "The last giants: New evidence for giant Late Triassic (Rhaetian) ichthyosaurs from the UK". PLOS ONE. 19 (4). e0300289. Bibcode:2024PLoSO..1900289L. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0300289. PMC 11023487. PMID 38630678.
- ^ Fang, Y.-W.; Wolniewicz, A. S.; Liu, J. (2024). "A new species of mixosaurid ichthyosaur from the Middle Triassic of Luxi County, Yunnan Province, South China". Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 69 (2): 263–280. doi:10.4202/app.01133.2024.
- ^ Fonseca, María Eurídice Páramo; Cabra, Cristian David Benavides; Camacho, Renzo Garavito (2024-09-19). "A new species of Platypterygius (Ophthalmosauridae) from the lower Barremian of Colombia and assessment of the species composition of the genus". Earth Sciences Research Journal. 28 (2): 103–126. doi:10.15446/esrj.v28n2.112332. ISSN 2339-3459.
- ^ Liu, J.; Wu, F.; Qiao, Y. (2024). "A new basal hupehsuchian from the Early Triassic of South China and its implication to the phylogenetic relationships of Ichthyosauromorpha (Reptilia: Diapsida)". Historical Biology: An International Journal of Paleobiology: 1–11. doi:10.1080/08912963.2024.2354791.
- ^ Sprumont, H.; Allione, F.; Schwab, F.; Wang, B.; Mucignat, C.; Lunati, I.; Scheyer, T.; Ijspeert, A.; Jusufi, A. (2024). "Asymmetric fin shape changes swimming dynamics of ancient marine reptiles' soft robophysical models". Bioinspiration & Biomimetics. 19 (4). 046005. Bibcode:2024BiBi...19d6005S. doi:10.1088/1748-3190/ad3f5e. hdl:20.500.11850/673044. PMID 38626775.
- ^ Ye, S.-Y.; Wu, K.; Sun, Z.-Y.; Sander, P. M.; Samathi, A.; Sun, Y.-Y.; Ji, C.; Suteethorn, V.; Liu, J. (2024). "Conodonts suggest a late Spathian (late Early Triassic) age for Thaisaurus chonglakmanii (Reptilia: Ichthyosauromorpha) from Thailand". Palaeoworld. doi:10.1016/j.palwor.2024.07.004.
- ^ Gu, L.-A.; Wolniewicz, A. S.; Liu, J. (2024). "New information on the dentition of Chaohusaurus zhangjiawanensis (Reptilia, Ichthyosauriformes) from the Early Triassic of Yuan'an, Hubei Province, China". Swiss Journal of Palaeontology. 143 (1). 35. Bibcode:2024SwJP..143...35G. doi:10.1186/s13358-024-00331-8.
- ^ Fernández, M. S.; Campos, L.; Manzo, A.; Vlachos, E. (2024). "Bone Connectivity and the Evolution of Ichthyosaur Fins". Diversity. 16 (6). 349. doi:10.3390/d16060349.
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