Information about Rauisuchia

Rauisuchians
Fossil range: Triassic
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Prestosuchus

Prestosuchus
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Sauropsida
Subclass:Diapsida
Infraclass:Archosauromorpha
(unranked)Crurotarsi
Order:Rauisuchia*
von Huene, 1942
Families
Rauisuchia are a poorly known assemblage of predatory and mostly large (often 4 to 6 meters) Triassic archosaurs. Originally it was believed that they were related to Erythrosuchids (Sill, 1974), but it is now known that they are crurotarsans (Benton 2004). Three families are generally recognised: Prestosuchidae, Rauisuchidae, and Poposauridae, as well as a number of forms (e.g. those from the Olenekian of Russia) that are too primitive and/or poorly known to fit in any of these groups. There has been considerable suggestion that the group as currently defined is paraphyletic, representing a number of related lineages independently evolving and filling the same ecological niche of medium to top terrestrial predator. For example, Parrish (1993) and Juul (1994) found poposaurid rauisuchians to be more closely related to Crocodilia than to prestosuchids. In a more recent study, Nesbitt (2003) presented a different phylogeny with a monophyletic Rauisuchia. The group may even be something of a "wastebasket taxon". Determining exact phylogenetic relationships is difficult because of the scrappy nature of a lot of the material. However, recent discoveries and studies such as those of Batrachotomus (Gower, 2002; Benton & Walker 2002) are shedding light on the evolutionary relationships of this poorly known but fascinating group.

José Bonaparte and following him Michael Benton argue (Bonaparte 1981, Benton, 1984) that rauisuchians such as Saurosuchus developed an erect stance independently of and differently to dinosaurs, by means of having the femur vertical and angling the acetabulum ventrally, rather than having an angled neck or curve in the femur. They refer to this as the pillar-erect posture.

The erect gait indicates that these animals were clearly active, agile predators, with locomotor superiority over the kannemeyerid dicynodonts and abundant rhynchosaurs on which they fed. They were successful animals, the largest with skulls a meter or more in length, and continued right until the end of the Triassic, when, along with many other large archosaurs, they were killed off by the end Triassic extinction event. With their demise, theropod dinosaurs were able to emerge as the sole large terrestrial predators. Meat-eating dinosaur footprints suddenly increase in size at the start of the Jurassic, when rauisuchians are absent (Olsen et al. 2002). However, recently found Cretaceous fossils originally thought to be those of crocodiles, but which resemble rauisuchians, might suggest that a few rauisuchians survived under the shadows of dinosaurs until the Cretaceous–Tertiary extinction event.)

Well-known Rauisuchians include Ticinosuchus of the Middle Triassic of Europe (Switzerland and Northern Italy), Saurosuchus of the late Triassic (Late Carnian) of South America (Argentina), and Postosuchus of the late Triassic (Late Carnian to Early Norian) of North America (SW USA). One Rauisuchian, Teratosaurus, was for a long time even considered an early theropod dinosaur.

External links

References

The Triassic is a geologic period that extends from about 251 to 199 Ma (million years ago). As the first period of the Mesozoic Era, the Triassic follows the Permian and is followed by the Jurassic. Both the start and end of the Triassic are marked by major extinction events.
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Scientific classification or biological classification is a method by which biologists group and categorize species of organisms. Scientific classification also can be called scientific taxonomy, but should be distinguished from folk taxonomy, which lacks scientific basis.
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Chordata
Bateson, 1885

Typical Classes

See below

Chordates (phylum Chordata) are a group of animals that includes the vertebrates, together with several closely related invertebrates.
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Sauropsida*
Goodrich, 1916

Subclasses
  • Anapsida
  • Diapsida
Synonyms
  • Reptilia Laurenti, 1768
Reptiles are tetrapods and amniotes, animals whose embryos are surrounded by an amniotic membrane, and members of the class
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Diapsida
Osborn, 1903

Groups

See text

Diapsids ("two arches") are a group of tetrapod animals that developed two holes (temporal fenestra) in each side of their skulls, about 300 million years ago during the late Carboniferous period.
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Archosauromorpha
von Huene, 1946

Orders

See text
Archosauromorpha (Greek for "ruling lizard forms") is an Infraclass of diapsid reptiles that first appeared during the late Permian and became more common during the Triassic.
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Crurotarsi
Sereno & Arcucci, 1990

Orders
  • Phytosauria
  • Aetosauria
  • Rauisuchia*
  • Crocodilia


The Crurotarsi ("cross-ankles") are a group of archosaurs created as a node-based clade by Paul Sereno in 1991 to supplant the old term
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In phylogenetics, a group of organisms is said to be paraphyletic (Greek para = near and phyle = race) if the group contains its most recent common ancestor, but does not contain all the descendants of that ancestor.
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Friedrich von Huene (March 22, 1875 – April 4, 1969) was a German paleontologist who named more dinosaurs in the early 20th century than anyone else in Europe.

His discoveries include the skeletons of a herd of more than 35 Plateosaurus
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19th century - 20th century - 21st century
1910s  1920s  1930s  - 1940s -  1950s  1960s  1970s
1939 1940 1941 - 1942 - 1943 1944 1945

Year 1942 (MCMXLII
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Prestosuchidae
Romer, 1966

Genera

Batrachotomus
Mandasuchus
Prestosuchus
Ticinosuchus
Saurosuchus
Yarasuchus
Prestosuchidae are a group of Triassic carnivorous archosaurs.
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Rauisuchidae
von Huene, 1936

Genera

Rauisuchus
Fasolasuchus
Heptasuchus
Tikisaurus
?Teratosaurus
?Postosuchus
Rauisuchidae
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Poposauridae
Nopcsa, 1923

Genera

Arizonasaurus
Bromsgroveia
Effigia
Poposaurus
Postosuchus
Sillosuchus
Shuvosaurus

The Poposauridae are a family of large (around 2.
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The Triassic is a geologic period that extends from about 251 to 199 Ma (million years ago). As the first period of the Mesozoic Era, the Triassic follows the Permian and is followed by the Jurassic. Both the start and end of the Triassic are marked by major extinction events.
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Archosauria
Cope, 1869

Clades
  • Crurotarsi
  • Aetosauria
  • Crocodilia (crocodiles)
  • Phytosauria

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Erythrosuchidae
Broom, 1905

Genera

see Taxonomy

Erythrosuchidae (meaning "red crocodiles") are a family of large basal archosauromorph carnivores that lived from the later Early Triassic (Olenekian) to the early Middle Triassic (Anisian).
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Crurotarsi
Sereno & Arcucci, 1990

Orders
  • Phytosauria
  • Aetosauria
  • Rauisuchia*
  • Crocodilia


The Crurotarsi ("cross-ankles") are a group of archosaurs created as a node-based clade by Paul Sereno in 1991 to supplant the old term
..... Click the link for more information.
Prestosuchidae
Romer, 1966

Genera

Batrachotomus
Mandasuchus
Prestosuchus
Ticinosuchus
Saurosuchus
Yarasuchus
Prestosuchidae are a group of Triassic carnivorous archosaurs.
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Rauisuchidae
von Huene, 1936

Genera

Rauisuchus
Fasolasuchus
Heptasuchus
Tikisaurus
?Teratosaurus
?Postosuchus
Rauisuchidae
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Poposauridae
Nopcsa, 1923

Genera

Arizonasaurus
Bromsgroveia
Effigia
Poposaurus
Postosuchus
Sillosuchus
Shuvosaurus

The Poposauridae are a family of large (around 2.
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The Olenekian (also known as the Yongningzhenian) is a stage of the Early Triassic epoch. It spans the time between 249.7 ± 0.7 Ma and 245 ± 0.7 Ma (million years ago).
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In phylogenetics, a group of organisms is said to be paraphyletic (Greek para = near and phyle = race) if the group contains its most recent common ancestor, but does not contain all the descendants of that ancestor.
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Crocodilia
Owen, 1842

black: range of Crocodilia


Families
  • Gavialidae
  • Alligatoridae
  • Crocodylidae


Crocodilia
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In phylogenetics, a group is monophyletic (Greek: "of one race") if it consists of an inferred common ancestor and all its descendants. A taxonomic group that contains organisms but not their common ancestor is called polyphyletic, and a group that contains some but not all
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Wastebasket taxon (also called a wastebin taxon or dustbin taxon) is a term used in taxonomic circles to refer to a taxon that has the sole purpose of classifying organisms that do not fit anywhere else.
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Batrachotomus (meaning frog slicer) belongs to Rauisuchia, a group of predatory and large Triassic archosaurs. It was an early relative of Postosuchus and lived in the Early and Mid Triassic, about 236-215 million years ago.
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For the historical figure, see Joseph Bonaparte
José Fernando Bonaparte, Ph.D. (b. June 14, 1928), is an Argentine paleontologist who discovered a plethora of South American dinosaurs and mentored a new generation of Argentine paleontologists like Rodolfo
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Michael Benton is the name of:
  • Michael J. Benton, a professor of vertebrate palaeontology at the University of Bristol.
  • Michael L. Benton, a Foreign Service Officer for the U.S. Department of State.

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Saurosuchus
Reig, 1959

Species
  • ?S. galilei
Saurosuchus ('lizard crocodile') is an extinct genus of archosaur reptile belonging to the rauisuchian order.
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