Cynognathus
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Cynognathus |
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Cynognathus
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Prehistoric
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Cynognathus crateronotus Seeley, 1895 |
Cynognathus was a metre-long predator of the Lower Triassic. It was one of the more mammal-like of the "mammal-like reptiles", a member of a grouping called Eucynodontia. The genus Cynognathus had a more-or-less worldwide distribution. Fossils have so far been recovered from South Africa, South America, China and Antarctica.
The genus Cynognathus ("Dog jaw") has been given several different names over the years. It has also been known as Cistecynodon, Cynidiognathus, Cynogomphius, Karoomys, Lycaenognathus, Lycochampsa, Lycognathus, and Nythosaurus. In addition, according to the records of the Peabody Museum of Yale University, Richard Owen used the name Nythosaurus for this animal in 1876. This usage seems to be unconnected with Cynognathus. Cynognathus is presently the only recognized member of family Cynognathidae. Opinions vary as to whether all remains belong to the same species.
The species Cynognathus crateronotus is also known as Cistecynodon parvus, Cynidiognathus broomi, Cynidiognathus longiceps, Cynidiognathus merenskyi, Cynognathus beeryi, Cynognathus minor, Cynognathus platyceps, Cynogomphius berryi, Karoomys browni, Lycaenognathus platyceps, Lycochampsa ferox, Lycognathus ferox, Nythosaurus browni. Fifteen different names for one Mesozoic creature might be regarded as excessive, but it's by no means a record. The dinosaur Plateosaurus engelhardti, has been named well over 20 times.
The genera Karoomys, Cistecynodon and Nythosaurus are known only from tiny juveniles, while Lycognathus cucullatus seems to be a misidentified snake from the Balearic Islands, although confirmation is elusive.
[edit] Fossil locations
Fossils have been found in Karoo; the Puesto Viejo Formation; Fremouw Formation, in South Africa/Lesotho; Argentina; Antarctica; and China.
[edit] Age
The Cynognathus lived between the Spathian (Lower Triassic) and the Anisian (Middle Triassic)
The dentary was equipped with differentiated teeth that show this animal could effectively process its food before swallowing. The presence of a secondary palate in the mouth indicates that Cynognathus would have been able to breathe and swallow simultaneously. The lack of ribs in the stomach region suggests the presence of an efficient diaphragm: an important muscle for mammalian breathing. Pits and canals on the bone of the snout indicate concentrations of nerves and blood vessels. In mammals, such structures allow hairs (whiskers) to be used as sensory organs. All of these features indicate that Cynognathus was an endothermic animal: a "warm blooded" creature with a relatively high metabolic rate, which needed to be able to process food and oxygen quickly.
[edit] Reference
- Seeley (1895), "Researches on the structure, organization and classification of the fossil Reptilia. Part IX, section 1. On the Therosuchia". Phil. Transactions of the Roy. Soc. of London, series B 185 (21), p. 987-1018.