Baurusuchid
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Baurusuchid
Baurusuchidae is a Gondwanan Family (biology), family of mesoeucrocodylians that lived during the Late Cretaceous. It is a group of terrestrial hypercarnivorous crocodilians from South America (Argentina and Brazil) and possibly Pakistan. Baurusuchidae has been, in accordance with the PhyloCode, officially defined as the least inclusive clade containing ''Cynodontosuchus rothi, Pissarrachampsa sera,'' and ''Baurusuchus pachecoi.'' Baurusuchids have been placed in the Suborder (biology), suborder Baurusuchia, and two Subfamily (biology), subfamilies have been proposed: Baurusuchinae and Pissarrachampsinae. Genera Several genera have been assigned to Baurusuchidae. ''Baurusuchus'' was the first, being the namesake of the family. Remains of ''Baurusuchus'' have been found from the Late Cretaceous Bauru Group of Brazil in deposits that are Turonian - Santonian in age. In addition to ''Baurusuchus'', five other South American crocodyliforms have been assigned to Baurusuchidae: ''Campin ...
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Stratiotosuchus
''Stratiotosuchus'' (from Greek, (stratiōtēs, "soldier") and (suchos, "crocodile")) is an extinct genus of baurusuchid mesoeucrocodylian from the Adamantina Formation in Brazil. It lived during the Late Cretaceous. The first fossils were found in the 1980s, and the type species ''Stratiotosuchus maxhechti'' was named in 2001. A hyperpredator, it and other baurusuchids may have filled niches occupied elsewhere by theropod dinosaurs. Description ''Stratiotosuchus'' has a deep, laterally compressed skull long. ''Stratiotosuchus'' reached up to in total length (including tail), making it about the same size as ''Baurusuchus''. The teeth are ziphodont, meaning that they are laterally compressed, curved, and serrated. Like other baurusuchids, ''Stratiotosuchus'' has a reduced number of teeth: three in its premaxilla and five in its maxilla. When the jaw is closed, the teeth of the upper jaw overlie those of the lower jaw and shear closely together. ''Stratiotosuchus'' has on ...
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Pissarrachampsa
''Pissarrachampsa'' (meaning "piçarra he local name for the sandstones it was recovered from">sandstone.html" ;"title="he local name for the sandstone">he local name for the sandstones it was recovered fromcrocodile") is an extinct genus of baurusuchidae, baurusuchid mesoeucrocodylian from the Late Cretaceous of Brazil. It is based on a nearly complete skull and a referred partial skull and lower jaw from the ?Campanian - ?Maastrichtian-age Vale do Rio do Peixe Formation of the Bauru Group, found in the vicinity of Gurinhatã, Brazil.Montefeltro, F.C., Larsson, H.C.E., & Langer, M.C. (2011) A New Baurusuchid (Crocodyliformes, Mesoeucrocodylia) from the Late Cretaceous of Brazil and the Phylogeny of Baurusuchidae. PLoS ONE 6(7): e21916./ref> Description ''Pissarrachampsa'' is known from its holotype, a nearly complete skull and skeleton, as well as other referred cranial and postcranial materials.Godoy PL, Bronzati M, Eltink E, Marsola JCA, Cidade GM, Langer MC, Montefeltro FC. ...
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Aphaurosuchus
''Aphaurosuchus'' is an extinct genus of baurusuchid mesoeucrocodylian known from the Late Cretaceous Bauru Basin of São Paulo, southern Brazil. It contains a single species, ''Aphaurosuchus escharafacies.'' Discovery and naming In 2012 the Laboratório de Paleontologia lead an expedition to the municipality of Jales, São Paulo State, excavating at the Fazenda Furnas site which had yielded baurusuchid remains during previous digs. This site, belonging to the Adamantina Formation/Vale do Rio do Peixe Formation, contained a nearly complete baurusuchid skeleton, specimen ''LPRP/USP 0697'', broken into six main blocks. The first block contains the skull, all cervical vertebrae with associated osteoderms as well as the first four thoracic vertebrae, both scapulae and articulated coracoids. The second block is made up of most of the postcranial skeletal from the 8th thoracic to the 9th caudal vertebra with the associated double row of parasagittal osteoderms, the posterior thoracic ...
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Campinasuchus
''Campinasuchus'' is an extinct genus of baurusuchid mesoeucrocodylian from Minas Gerais State of Brazil. Description ''Campinasuchus'', like other baurusuchids, was a fully terrestrial predator. It had a deep and laterally compressed skull with large, blade-like teeth. Compared to other baurusuchids, it has a very short, low snout. It is much narrower than the back of the skull. Its upper margin is also lower than the back of the skull, giving the head a slightly sloping profile (other baurusuchids have high snouts that are level with the rest of the skull). The third maxillary tooth of the upper jaw and the fourth dentary tooth of the lower jaw are greatly enlarged. A small pit on the premaxilla accommodates the first tooth of the mandible when the jaws are closed. This pit is positioned between the first and second premaxillary teeth. A deep notch forms the boundary between the premaxilla and maxilla, and provides an opening for the large fourth dentary tooth of the lower jaw ...
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Aplestosuchus
''Aplestosuchus'' is an extinct genus of baurusuchid mesoeucrocodylian known from the Late Cretaceous Adamantina Formation of São Paulo, southern Brazil. It contains a single species, ''Aplestosuchus sordidus''. ''A. sordidus'' is represented by a single articulated and nearly complete skeleton, preserving the remains of an unidentified sphagesaurid crocodyliform in its abdominal cavity. The specimen represents direct evidence of predation between different taxa of crocodyliforms in the fossil record. Discovery ''Aplestosuchus'' is known solely from the holotype LPRP/USP 0229a, an articulated and nearly complete skeleton including the skull, housed at the Laboratório de Paleontologia, Universidade de São Paulo. Additionally, isolated teeth and skull bones of an unidentified sphagesaurid crocodyliform were preserved in the abdominal cavity of LPRP/USP 0229a, and assigned to the specimen number LPRP/USP 0229b. The find represents direct evidence of predation between differen ...
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Baurusuchinae
Baurusuchinae is a subfamily of baurusuchid crocodyliforms from the Late Cretaceous of Brazil. Named in 2011, it contains the baurusuchids '' Aphaurosuchus'', '' Aplestosuchus, Baurusuchus'' and '' Stratiotosuchus''. Baurusuchinae is one of two subfamilies of Baurusuchidae, the other being Pissarrachampsinae. Several features distinguish baurusuchines from pissarrachampsines and help diagnose the subfamily. The orbital section of the jugal is twice the depth of the infratemporal portion. There are depressions on the quadrate running from top to bottom. The condyle on the side of the quadrate is almost as wide as the middle condyle. The bottom of the choanal septum is smooth. The ridged border of the middle face of the angular does not overcome the front of the mandibular fenestra. The frontal bone, situated behind the prefrontals, is very wide. The skull of baurusuchines is relatively straight when viewed from above. Baurusuchinae is a stem-based taxon formally defined in 2021 ...
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Baurusuchus
''Baurusuchus'' is an extinct member of the ancestral crocodilian lineage, which lived in Brazil from 90 to 83.5 million years ago, in the Late Cretaceous period. Technically, it is a genus of baurusuchid mesoeucrocodylian. It was a terrestrial predator and scavenger, about long and in weight. ''Baurusuchus'' lived during the Turonian to Santonian stages of the Late Cretaceous Period, in Adamantina Formation, Brazil. It gets its name from the Brazilian Bauru Group ("Bauru crocodile"). It was related to the earlier-named ''Cynodontosuchus rothi'', which was smaller, with weaker dentition. The three species are ''B. pachechoi'', named after Eng Joviano Pacheco, its discoverer, ''B. salgadoensis'' (named after General Salgado County in São Paulo, Brazil) and ''B. albertoi'' (named after Alberto Barbosa de Carvalho, Brazilian paleontologist). The latter species is disputed (see phylogeny section). Its relatives include the similarly sized ''Stratiotosuchus'' from the Adamanti ...
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Pabwehshi
''Pabwehshi'' (meaning "Pab ormationbeast Urdu.html"_;"title="wehshi"_in_Urdu">wehshi"_in_Urdu)_is_an_extinct.html" ;"title="Urdu">wehshi"_in_Urdu.html" ;"title="Urdu.html" ;"title="wehshi" in Urdu">wehshi" in Urdu">Urdu.html" ;"title="wehshi" in Urdu">wehshi" in Urdu) is an extinct">Urdu">wehshi"_in_Urdu.html" ;"title="Urdu.html" ;"title="wehshi" in Urdu">wehshi" in Urdu">Urdu.html" ;"title="wehshi" in Urdu">wehshi" in Urdu) is an extinct genus of mesoeucrocodylian. It is holotype, based on Geological Survey of Pakistan, GSP-UM 2000, a partial snout and corresponding lower jaw elements, with another snout assigned to it. These specimens were found in Maastrichtian-age Upper Cretaceous rocks of the Pab Formation in Balochistan, Pakistan, and represent the first diagnostic crocodyliform fossils from Cretaceous rocks of South Asia. ''Pabwehshi'' had serrated interlocking teeth in its snout that formed a "zig-zag" cutting edge. ''Pabwehshi'' was named in 2001 by Jeffrey A. W ...
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Wargosuchus
''Wargosuchus'' (meaning "warg crocodile") is an extinct genus of baurusuchid mesoeucrocodylian from the Late Cretaceous of Argentina. It is known from a fragmentary skull from the Santonian-age Bajo de la Carpa Formation of the Neuquén Group, found in the vicinity of Neuquén, Neuquén Province, and was described by Agustín Martinelli and Diego Pais in 2008. The type species, and so far the only species, is ''Wargosuchus australis''. ''Wargosuchus'' is based on MOZ-PV 6134, a partial right premaxilla and maxilla, and partial skull roof. Martinelli and Pais distinguished ''Wargosuchus'' from other mesoeucrocodylians by skull details, such as a deep groove on the midline of the frontal bones, a large depression for the olfactory bulbs, and enlargement of the last tooth of the premaxilla followed by a deep pit for the following tooth of the lower jaw. The animal had a robust skull. It shared its setting with four other taxa of mesoeucrocodylians: common ''Notosuchus'', and ra ...
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Pissarrachampsinae
Pissarrachampsinae is a subfamily of baurusuchid crocodyliforms from the Late Cretaceous of Brazil and Argentina. It was named in 2011 with the description of ''Pissarrachampsa sera'' and includes ''P. sera'' from Brazil and the related '' Wargosuchus australis'' from Argentina. Pissarrachampsinae is one of two subfamilies of Baurusuchidae, the other being Baurusuchinae. Pissarrachampsines are distinguished from baurusuchines mainly by the shapes of bones on the tops of their skulls. The nasals and frontal touch each other at only a small point on the midline of the skull. The frontal bone, which is positioned directly behind the prefrontals, bears a groove that runs along its midline. Pissarrachampsines also have a pitted depression at the tip of the snout called the circumnarial fossa. The nostril openings are found within this fossa. Phylogenetically, Pissarrachampsinae is a stem-based taxon. When it was named, Pissarrachampsinae was defined as ''Pissarrachampsa sera'' and al ...
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Razanandrongobe
''Razanandrongobe'' (meaning "ancestor f thelarge lizard" in Malagasy) is a genus of carnivorous ziphosuchian crocodyliform from the Middle Jurassic of Madagascar. It contains the type and only species ''Razanandrongobe sakalavae'', named in 2004 by Simone Maganuco and colleagues based on isolated bones found in 2003. The remains, which included a fragment of maxilla and teeth, originated from the Bathonian-aged Sakaraha Formation of Mahajanga, Madagascar. While they clearly belonged to a member of the Archosauria, Maganuco and colleagues refrained from assigning the genus to a specific group because the fragmentary remains resembled lineages among both the theropod dinosaurs and crocodylomorphs. Further remains (including a premaxilla and lower jawbone) had been discovered as early as 1972, but were not described until 2017 by Cristiano Dal Sasso and colleagues. These remains allowed them to confidently assign ''Razanandrongobe'' as the oldest-known member of the Notosuchia, ...
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Cynodontosuchus Rothi
''Cynodontosuchus'' is an extinct genus of baurusuchid mesoeucrocodylian. Fossils have been found from Argentina of Late Cretaceous age from the Bajo de la Carpa Formation (dating back to the Santonian), the Pichi Picun Leufu Formation (dating back to the Coniacian and Santonian). the Tiupampan Santa Lucía Formation of Bolivia. Description Cynodontosuchus was the first non-Cenozoic sebecosuchian to be described, being assigned to the suborder in 1896 by Arthur Smith Woodward. It was described on the basis of an incomplete snout and articulated lower jaw. The presence of a large saber-like second maxillary tooth and a diastema between the maxilla and premaxilla that made room for a large mandibular tooth suggests that ''Cynodontosuchus'' is a member of the family Baurusuchidae. It has been proposed several times that the genus is a senior synonym of ''Baurusuchus ''Baurusuchus'' is an extinct member of the ancestral crocodilian lineage, which lived in Brazil from 90 to 83.5 ...
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