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The anatomy of the palate in Early Triassic <i>Chaohusaurus brevifemoralis</i> (Reptilia: Ichthyosauriformes) based on digital reconstruction

Ya-Lei Yin, Cheng Ji, Min Zhou

2021PeerJ14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The palatal anatomy of ichthyosauriforms remains largely unknown. Here, the complete palate of the early-branching ichthyosauriform Chaohusaurus brevifemoralis is reconstructed and described for the first time with the assistance of high-resolution X-ray computed tomography (CT) scanning on the basis of the three-dimensionally preserved skull of its paratype (GMPKU-P-3086) from the Lower Triassic of South China. The reconstruction reveals new palatal features of C. brevifemoralis . The palatine contacts the jugal directly, which is observed in ichthyosauriforms for the first time. A single row of denticles is present on each side of the palate. The vomer exceeds the anterior and posterior margins of the internal naris. The pterygoid is posterior to the internal naris. The epipterygoid is present and the ectopterygoid is absent.

Topics & Concepts

VomerAnatomySkullHard palateGeologyBiologyPaleontologyMedicineDentistryPaleontology and Evolutionary BiologyIchthyology and Marine BiologyAmphibian and Reptile Biology
The anatomy of the palate in Early Triassic <i>Chaohusaurus brevifemoralis</i> (Reptilia: Ichthyosauriformes) based on digital reconstruction | Litcius