''Loxomma'' (meaning “slanting eyes”) is an extinct genus of
Loxommatinae
Baphetidae is an extinct family of early tetrapods. Baphetids were large labyrinthodont predators of the Late Carboniferous period ( Namurian through Westphalian) of Europe. Fragmentary remains from the Early Carboniferous of Canada have been te ...
and one of the first
Carboniferous
The Carboniferous ( ) is a geologic period and system of the Paleozoic that spans 60 million years from the end of the Devonian Period million years ago ( Mya), to the beginning of the Permian Period, million years ago. The name ''Carbonifero ...
tetrapods.
They were first described in 1862 and further described in 1870 when two more craniums were found.
It is mostly associated with the area of the United Kingdom.
They share features with modern reptiles as well as with fish.
They had 4 paddle-like limbs that they used to swim in lakes, but they breathed air.
Their diet consisted mostly of live fish.
They are of the family
Baphetidae
Baphetidae is an extinct family of early tetrapods. Baphetids were large labyrinthodont predators of the Late Carboniferous period (Namurian through Westphalian) of Europe. Fragmentary remains from the Early Carboniferous of Canada have been ten ...
which are distinguished by their keyhole shaped orbits,
while ''Loxomma'' themselves are distinguished by the unique texture on their skulls, said to be honeycomb-like.
History and discovery
The genus ''Loxomma'' was discovered and named by
Thomas Henry Huxley in 1862 via a near perfect cranium, a vertebra and a rib in the
Lanarkshire coal-field of
Scotland.
The family
Baphetidae
Baphetidae is an extinct family of early tetrapods. Baphetids were large labyrinthodont predators of the Late Carboniferous period (Namurian through Westphalian) of Europe. Fragmentary remains from the Early Carboniferous of Canada have been ten ...
were among the first
Carboniferous
The Carboniferous ( ) is a geologic period and system of the Paleozoic that spans 60 million years from the end of the Devonian Period million years ago ( Mya), to the beginning of the Permian Period, million years ago. The name ''Carbonifero ...
tetrapods to be found and were first described by William Dawson in 1863, with ''Loxomma'' being the earliest in the family.
The subfamily Loxommatinae within
Baphetidae
Baphetidae is an extinct family of early tetrapods. Baphetids were large labyrinthodont predators of the Late Carboniferous period (Namurian through Westphalian) of Europe. Fragmentary remains from the Early Carboniferous of Canada have been ten ...
includes three
genera
Genus ( plural genera ) is a taxonomic rank used in the biological classification of living and fossil organisms as well as viruses. In the hierarchy of biological classification, genus comes above species and below family. In binomial nomenclat ...
: ''Loxomma'', ''
Megalocephalus
''Megalocephalus'' (meaning "big head") is an extinct genus of baphetid animal from the late Carboniferous ( Westphalian A-C) of the British Isles and the United States (Ohio). It contains two species, ''M. pachycephalus'' and ''M. lineolatus'' ...
'', and ''
Kyrinion
''Kyrinion'' is an extinct genus of baphetid tetrapod from the Late Carboniferous of England. It is known from a skull that was found in Tyne and Wear county dating back to the Westphalian (stage), Westphalian stage. Along with the skull is part ...
''.
One cranium was found in May 1870 and another was found in June 1870, both by Thomas Atthey.
Specimen belonging to ''Loxomma''
''B. orientalis''
Discovered in Nyrany, Czech Republic, the skull of this new specimen was studied in order to determine whether it belonged in the ''Loxomma'' group or Baphetes group. The classification was determined by comparing the shape of the skulls from a closely related species.
In order to check for similarities and differences between ''Loxomma'' and Baphetes 2 other skulls were used, belonging to ''L. acutirostris'' and ''B. kirkbyi''. ''Loxomma'' skulls were high and triangular, while the Baphetes had more of a broad flat snout. In ''Loxomma'', the premaxilla showed space for 8 teeth, while Baphetes had space for 10-11 teeth. After checking the specimen, what was thought to be ''B. orientalis'' was found to be closer to the ''Loxomma'' group. Due to this closer relationship it was proposed to call the specimen ''L. lintonensis'', which is closer to the ''L. acutirostris'' in a cladogram.
[Milner AC, Milner AR, Walsh SA. A new specimen of Baphetes from Nýřany, Czech Republic and the intrinsic relationships of the Baphetidae.Acta Zoologica. 2009;90:318-334. doi:10.1111/j.1463-6395.2008.00340.x.]
Description
Skull and dentition
''Loxomma'' and the family
Baphetidae
Baphetidae is an extinct family of early tetrapods. Baphetids were large labyrinthodont predators of the Late Carboniferous period (Namurian through Westphalian) of Europe. Fragmentary remains from the Early Carboniferous of Canada have been ten ...
are distinct by their large and irregular orbits that have a forwardly directed extension, creating a keyhole shaped orbit.
There is a unique pitting on the exposed surfaces of the cranial bones in ''Loxomma'' often described as being honeycomb-shaped or net-like that can be used as a distinguishing feature.
When looking at the upper surface of the skull it looks like that of ''
Archegosaurus'' or an
alligator of the
Crocodilia order, however, the snout and the whole skull is actually broader than that of an alligator.
Large
Labyrinthodonts have their lower jaw greatly prolonged behind the hinge to give additional leverage to muscles. ''Loxomma'' do not have this feature. Instead they have a hinge at the very end of the lower jaw; in this way they lose some mechanical advantages and power in their bite but gain speed instead.
The jaws and palates have a battery of large, curved, and slightly keeled teeth.
On the upper jaw there is a pair of vomerine tusks, and two pairs of palatal tusks with 5 or 6 smaller teeth between each of the pairs.
Each pair of tusks has a depression for two teeth on each side of the jaw with only one tooth present at a time. It was one thought that the empty depression was fit for the teeth of the lower jaw in order to close the mouth, but upon further inspection small bits of tooth could be seen in the empty depressions showing that there was a tooth there once.
The size of the teeth varies on the upper and the lower jaw, the larger teeth being more anchored into the mandible than the smaller ones on the lower jaw.
Paleobiology
Based only on the size of the skull, the full body size of ''Loxomma'' is approximated to be 14 feet long, although it is hard to tell definitively without the presence of any post-cranial bones.
They lived between the water and the land feeding on live fish as is evident in the shape of their jaw hinge and their two-edged teeth.
Because the nasal bones are paired and the nasal apertures are both anterior and pharyngeal, it is indicated that they did breathe air.
The location of the orbits on the skull are raised up higher than the snout allowing for the animal to stick out its eyes while the rest of the body is underwater.
''Loxomma'' had 4 limbs that were paddle-like, based on the presence of one
humerus
The humerus (; ) is a long bone in the arm that runs from the shoulder to the elbow. It connects the scapula and the two bones of the lower arm, the radius and ulna, and consists of three sections. The humeral upper extremity consists of a roun ...
that is elongated and broad below and narrow at its upper end, that they used to swim.
It is concluded that they were a rather sluggish reptile that was still capable of rapid movements for predation, swimming like a fish but breathing air like the
alligators or
crocodile
Crocodiles (family (biology), family Crocodylidae) or true crocodiles are large semiaquatic reptiles that live throughout the tropics in Africa, Asia, the Americas and Australia. The term crocodile is sometimes used even more loosely to inclu ...
s of today.
References
External links
''Loxomma''at the
Paleobiology Database.
{{Taxonbar, from=Q6694327
Baphetoids
Carboniferous tetrapods of Europe