Project 4887: B. M. Gee, P. J. Makovicky, C. A. Sidor. 2022. Upside down: 'Cryobatrachus' and the lydekkerinid record from Antarctica. Journal of Paleontology. 96 (3):658-683.
Abstract
Temnospondyl amphibians are common in non-marine Triassic assemblages, including in the Fremouw Formation (Lower to Middle Triassic) of Antarctica. Temnospondyls were among the first tetrapods to be collected from Antarctica, but their record from the lower Fremouw Formation has long been tenuous. One taxon, ‘Austrobrachyops jenseni,’ is represented by a type specimen comprising only a partial pterygoid, which is now thought to belong to a dicynodont. A second taxon, ‘Cryobatrachus kitchingi,’ is represented by a type specimen comprising a nearly complete skull, but the specimen is only exposed ventrally, and uncertainty over its ontogenetic maturity and some aspects of its anatomy has led it to be designated as a nomen dubium by previous workers. Here, we redescribe the holotype of ‘C. kitchingi,’ an undertaking that is augmented by tomographic analysis. Most of the original interpretations and reconstructions cannot be substantiated, and some are clearly erroneous. Although originally classified as a lydekkerinid, the purported lydekkerinid characteristics are shown to be unfounded or no longer diagnostic for the family. We instead identify numerous features shared with highly immature capitosaurs, a large-bodied clade documented in the upper Fremouw Formation of Antarctica and elsewhere in the Lower Triassic. Additionally, we describe a newly collected partial skull from the lower Fremouw Formation that represents a relatively mature, small-bodied individual, which we provisionally refer to Lydekkerinidae; this specimen represents the most confident identification of a lydekkerinid from Antarctica to date.Read the article »
Article DOI: 10.1017/jpa.2021.115
Project DOI: 10.7934/P4887, http://dx.doi.org/10.7934/P4887
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MorphoBank Project 4887
- Creation Date:
18 September 2023 - Publication Date:
18 September 2023
This research
supported by
Authors' Institutions
- Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, Seattle
- University of Minnesota
- University of Washington