Garjainia is an extinct genus of erythrosuchid archosauriform reptile from the Olenekian of Russia and South Africa.[1] It was approximately 1.5m-2mm (04.9feet-07feetm) long. It contained two species, Garjainia prima from the Yarengian/Yarkenskian Supergorizont of Russia,[2] and Garjainia madiba from the Burgersdorp Formation (Cynognathus Assemblage Zone A) of South Africa.[3] "Vjuskovia triplicostata", a name assigned to some erythrosuchid fossils from Russia,[4] has been synonymized with Garjainia prima.[5] [6]
Garjainia prima was first discovered in a small village in Russia by a farmer. The exact date of the discovery is not known but its believed to have been found some time in the early 1950s. An later find is G. madiba, which was found in South Africa in the 1960s. In the same locality another much larger erythrosuchid was also found, called Erythrosuchus africanus, which was the one of the largest terrestrial predators of the Early Triassic (250 million years ago)[7]
Garjainia prima is believed to have been between 1.5-2 meters in length, with Garjainia madiba having a length of 2.5 meters.[3] Apart from its much smaller size, it was quite similar to its close relative Erythrosuchus. The skull was very large and extremely robust; the strong lower jaw was armed with robust, curved teeth, and the muzzle was high and narrow. The legs were short but sturdy, while the tail was shorter than that of other primitive archosauriforms such as Proterosuchus.The humerus was extremely massive in Garjainia, while the shoulder blade was hourglass-shaped and the dorsal ribs were very elongated, giving the animal a high-profile. Two species belonging to this genus are known: Garjainia prima from Russia and G. madiba from South Africa. The African species differs from the Russian one in the presence of large bony protuberances on the lateral surfaces of the jugal and postorbital bones. G. madiba also has more teeth and a more elongated postacetabular process of the ilium.[3] G. madiba
Garjainia was an erythrosuchid archosauriform. It was originally described by Soviet researcher VG Otschev, who classified it in its own family, Garjainidae.[2] However, another Soviet scientist, Tatarinov, considered the genera Erythrosuchus and Garjainia to be synonymous. Garjainia has since been classified as a separate genus, part of the Erythrosuchidae. In addition, attention has been drawn to the existence of many primitive characteristics in this animal, which has led to suggestions that Garjainia represents a transitional form between the Proterosuchidae (a large, likely paraphyletic lineage) and the family Erythrosuchidae.[8]
Below is a cladogram based on the phylogeny of Parrish (1992).[9]