Crocodylidae Cuvier, 1807

Louys, Julien & Price, Gilbert J., 2015, The Chinchilla Local Fauna: An exceptionally rich and well-preserved Pliocene vertebrate assemblage from fluviatile deposits of south-eastern Queensland, Australia, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 60 (3), pp. 551-572 : 554-555

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00042.2013

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D94E8222-FFC3-ED56-DB49-FA52FF130D30

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Crocodylidae Cuvier, 1807
status

 

Family Crocodylidae Cuvier, 1807 View in CoL View at ENA Genus Pallimnarchus de Vis, 1886

Type species: Pallimnarchus pollens de Vis, 1886 , type locality and age unknown.

Pallimnarchus pollens de Vis, 1886 Fig. 4F View Fig .

Material.— QM F11612 (symphyseal portion of dentary) from “Sand Scree locality, 4’6” from top of bank of Condamine River”, Chinchilla, Australia, Pliocene; QM F1154 (premaxilla) and QM F1166 (quadrate) from Chinchilla, Australia, Pliocene; QM F30583 (femur) from north bank of the Condamine River, Chinchilla Rifle Range, Australia, Pliocene.

Remarks.— De Vis (1886) described crocodilian material from the “Condamine drift” to which he assigned the name Pallimnarchus pollens . Molnar (1982b: 658) states that “De Vis did not designate a type specimen for Pallemnarchus [sic!] pollens , but described together material from four (possibly five) individuals of at least two, probably three, different taxa. De Vis’ intention with regard to the type material cannot be deduced from the labels or the register entries, as the former treat all the specimens described by de Vis (1886), with the exception of the maxillary piece, as syntypes, while the register designates QM F1149 (two articulated dentaries) as the type. The maxillary piece figured by de Vis (1886: pl. 10) was not recognised in the collections.” Molnar (1982b) formalised the species Pallimnarchus pollens by designating a symphyseal portion of the dentary as the lectotype ( QM F1149), noting that while the type locality was unknown, it was probably from the Darling Downs. He did refer several Chinchilla specimens (including QM F11612, F1154, and F1166) to this species. Willis and Molnar’s (1999) revision of this genus does not change that. Subsequently, Mackness et al. (2010) added an additional pathological specimen ( QM F30583) to the hypodigm (a femur showing fracture and puncture wounds).

Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Pliocene to Pleistocene; central and eastern mainland Australia.

Genus Quinkana Molnar, 1981

Type species: Quinkana fortirostrum Molnar, 1981 , Tea Tree Cave near Chillagoe, Queensland, Pleistocene .

Quinkana sp.

Fig. 4B View Fig .

Material.— QM F10204 (tooth) and QM F10205 (tooth) from Chinchilla Rifle Range, Australia, Pliocene; QM F1152 (jugal) from Chinchilla, Australia, Pliocene.

Remarks.— Molnar (1981) refers to two isolated teeth and a jugal from a ziphodont crocodile from the Chinchilla Sand. He considered them to be referrable to Quinkana .

Order Squamata Oppel, 1811

Family Agamidae Hardwicke and Gray, 1827 Agamidae gen. et sp. indet.

Fig. 4A View Fig .

Material.—QM F56197, unidentified fragments from Chinchilla Rifle Range, Australia, Pliocene.

Remarks. —Specimens supposed to represent agamids by Hutchinson and Mackness (2002) previously held in a private collection (WPC) were accessioned into the collections of the QM (see SOM: Table 1, Supplementary Online Material available at http://app.pan.pl/SOM/app60-Louys_Price_ SOM.pdf). However the specimen referred to the Agamidae by Hutchinson and Mackness (2002; WPC1354) does not correspond with the specimen of that number donated to the QM by the collectors (Ces and Doris Wilkinson, WPC). The specimen in question (now registered as QM F56197; Fig. 4A View Fig ) is a damaged and poorly preserved fossil in three pieces which can at best be referred to indeterminate? Reptilia. A similar error most likely explains the incorrect assignment of several specimens referred to as? Megalania by Hutchinson and Mackness (2002), which are clearly not squamates (see below).

QM

Queensland Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Crocodylia

Order

Eusuchia

Family

Crocodylidae

Loc

Crocodylidae Cuvier, 1807

Louys, Julien & Price, Gilbert J. 2015
2015
Loc

Quinkana

Molnar 1981
1981
Loc

Pallimnarchus pollens

de Vis 1886
1886
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF