Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Eothyrididae

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Kingdom
  
Extinction status
  
Extinct

Rank
  
Family

Clade
  
Phylum
  
Chordata

Eothyrididae uploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsccaEothyr

Similar
  
Eothyris, Caseasauria, Oedaleops, Varanopidae, Edaphosauridae

The Eothyrididae were a small group of very primitive, insectivorous synapsids. Only three genera are known, Eothyris, Vaughnictis and Oedaleops, all from the early Permian of North America. Their main distinguishing feature is the large caniniform tooth in front of the maxilla.

Eothyridids share with the Caseidae a number of specialised features associated with the morphology of the snout and external naris and it is likely that they were ancestral to them. The two together form the clade Caseasauria.

Eothyris is known from a single skull specimen; Oedaleops is known from three partial skulls and some parts of some limbs. Vaughnictis is known from a partial skull, six dorsal vertebrae and some hind-limb bones. The skulls are approximately 6 centimeters in length, suggesting that the total length of the animals was under 1 meter.

The species were found in the lower Permian in what is today North America. In modern cladistics, the Eothyrididae are considered to be a basal group within the Caseasauria. Caseasauria forms a sister group of the Eupelycosauria, out of which the therapsids evolved.

References

Eothyrididae Wikipedia