Caseoides
Caseoides Temporal range:
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Clade: | Synapsida |
Clade: | †Caseasauria |
Family: | †Caseidae |
Genus: | †Caseoides Olson and Berrbower, 1953 |
Species: | †C. sanangelensis
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Binomial name | |
†Caseoides sanangelensis Olson and Berrbower, 1953
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Caseoides is an extinct genus of large caseid synapsids that lived in the Kungurian Age (late Early Permian epoch). It was about 3 metres (9.8 ft) long, and like many other caseids, it was herbivorous and aquatic. It weighed between 150 to 200 kilograms (330 to 440 lb). Its fossils were found in San Angelo Formation, Texas.[1] Caseoides was very similar to Casea, but was slightly larger in size. Caseoides was a heavily built creature, as are most of the Caseids (except Caseopsis). In the development of its proportionally thick, stout limbs it represents the culmination of the Casea lineage. Its relatives became smaller in size during the Roadian Age. Only poorly preserved postcranial material is known including limbs.[2]
See also[]
- List of pelycosaurs
- Caseopsis - a relative of Caseoides, they lived side by side in Texas, but Caseopsis was lightly built, unlike Caseoides
- Casea - another relative, only smaller in size, but Casoides and Casea were very similar in body shape
References[]
- ^ Olson, Everett C.; Berrbower, James R. (1953). "The San Angelo Formation, Permian of Texas, and Its Vertebrates". The Journal of Geology. 61 (5): 389–423. Bibcode:1953JG.....61..389O. doi:10.1086/626109.
- ^ Ronchi, Ausonio; Sacchi, Eva; Romano, Marco; Nicosia, Umberto (2011). "A Huge Caseid Pelycosaur from North-Western Sardinia and Its Bearing on European Permian Stratigraphy and Palaeobiogeography". Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 56 (4): 723–738. doi:10.4202/app.2010.0087. S2CID 55085495.
Categories:
- Caseasaurs
- Prehistoric synapsid genera
- Cisuralian synapsids of North America
- Taxa named by Everett C. Olson
- Fossil taxa described in 1953
- Kungurian genus first appearances
- Kungurian genus extinctions
- Prehistoric synapsid stubs