Palaeovaranus cayluxi Zittel, 1887
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5252/geodiversitas2021v43a9 |
publication LSID |
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:11D0D852-39D7-449C-9EB3-C3D804114556 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4721471 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A1633B-FF80-FFE5-30D9-F949FFF03C43 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Palaeovaranus cayluxi Zittel, 1887 |
status |
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Palaeovaranus cayluxi Zittel, 1887 -1890
( Figs 34-36 View FIG View FIG View FIG ; 37A, C View FIG ; 41A View FIG )
EMENDED DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS. — The parietal of Palaeovaranus cayluxi differs from that of the sole other recognized species of the genus, Palaeovaranus lismonimenos n. sp., described below, in the following distinguished characters and the combination of features: 1) presence of a long median crest (longer than the length of the median triangular field measured in the median plane); 2) dorsolateral crests are low and without crenulations; 3) anterior end of the dorsolateral crests disappears on the dorsal surface of the root of the anterolateral process; 4) the ornamentation is weakly developed consisting of only several low ridges of various lengths running medially to the medial margins of the dorsolateral crests, as well as small mounds; and 5) the anterior margin of the parietal fossa lies at or posterior to the level of the junctions of the anterolateral margins of the supratemporal processes with the parietal plate.
REFERRED SPECIMENS. — Two almost complete parietals (NHMW 2019/0048/0001 and MNHN.F.QU17176).
DESCRIPTION
The parietal plate is rectangular; only the basis of the supratemporal processes is preserved in both parietals ( Figs 34-36 View FIG View FIG View FIG ). The anterolateral process is slender. The parietal foramen lies in about the mid-length of the anterior half of the parietal plate. The most distinctive feature of the dorsal surface of the parietal are two dorsolateral crests. The crests run in anterolateral-posteromedial direction. The anterior end of each crest gradually diminishes and terminates on the dorsal surface of the anterolateral process. The posterior ends of the dorsolateral crests meet in the median plane. The crests, together with the anterior margin of the parietal, limit a triangular field containing the parietal foramen. The surface bears several low mounds and more or less long ridges running along the medial margins of the dorsolateral crests. From the junction of the dorsolateral crests, a median crest extends posteriorly. The length of the crest increases with the size of the parietal and it seems that this increase in length comes to the negative expense of the midline length of the anterior triangular surface, which gradually throughout ontogeny becomes proportionally shorter.This can be demonstrated by comparing the largest known parietal of this species (the one figured by Rage 1978) relative to the two ones described in our paper. From the posterior end of the median crest, a median triangular field is located. The triangular field is a space between the posteriormost portions of the dorsolateral crests. The triangular field achieves its largest width posteriorly; its posterior end is the posteromedian margin of the parietal table ( Figs 34-36 View FIG View FIG View FIG ). The supratemporal fossa is mediolaterally broad indicating a strongly developed adductor musculature.
The ventral surface of the parietal is smooth ( Figs 34B View FIG ; 36B View FIG ; 37C View FIG ). The anterior margin of the parietal fossa lies at the level (or posterior to the level in large specimens) of the junctions of the anterolateral margins of the supratemporal processes with the parietal table. The ventral cranial crest is low and runs immediately medially to the lateral margin of the parietal. Its posterior end is turned posteromedially. The length of the juxtaotic and postfoveal crests is about the same. The posterior portion of the postfoveal crest runs immedi- ately laterally to the medial margin of the basal portion of the supratemporal process.
REMARKS
Although we acknowledge that the holotype of Palaeovaranus cayluxi is a maxilla (see Georgalis 2017 for details), we assign these parietals to the same species on the basis of the referral of a parietal by Rage (1978) to the same species (see Discussion below for details). The so far three known parietals of this species (the two ones documented herein plus the one described by Rage [1978]) enhance our understanding of the parietal morphology and variation in this species and allow a confident distinguishment from its new congeneric species described below.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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