Rhopalodon Explained
Rhopalodon is an extinct genus of therapsids from the Permian of Russia. It has been variously classified as a dinosaur, a dinocephalian, or another branch of amniotes. Rhopalodon is notable for being among the first "reptiles" mentioned in Nature. T.H. Huxley wrote of this animal, among others, in the inaugural issue of the magazine, in November 1869. He gave the age of this animal and of the contemporary Deuterosaurus as Triassic, but both are now known to have lived during the Middle Permian.
According to Tverdokhlebov et al. (2005), Rhopalodon was a medium-sized terrestrial dinocephalian herbivore that was characteristic of the early Tatarian Urzhumian biostratigraphic zone (Bolshekinelskaya and Amanakskaya svitas).[1]
See also
Further reading
- M. F. Ivakhnenko (2003). Eotherapsids from the East European Placket (Late Permian). Paleontological Journal 37(Suppl. 4):S339-S465
External links
- Web site: Triassic Dinosauria. Nature. https://web.archive.org/web/20160410132808/http://www.nature.com/nature/about/first/triassic.html. April 10, 2016. dead.
- Web site: Dinosaur Genera List corrections #125. Dml.cmnh. https://web.archive.org/web/20180429161814/http://dml.cmnh.org/1999Nov/msg00820.html. April 29, 2018. dead.
- Web site: The "Phthinosuchia". Kheper. https://web.archive.org/web/20170203123339/http://www.kheper.net/evolution/therapsida/Phthinosuchidae.html. February 3, 2017. dead.
Notes and References
- Valentin P. Tverdokhlebov, Galina I. Tverdokhlebova, Alla V. Minikh, Mikhail V. Surkov, and Michael J. Benton, (2005) Upper Permian vertebrates and their sedimentological context in the South Urals, Russia, Earth-Science Reviews 69 27-77 55