Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Terrestrisuchus

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Superorder
  
Crocodylomorpha

Phylum
  
Chordata

Class
  
Sauropsida

Species
  
T. gracilis

Rank
  
Genus

Terrestrisuchus wwwprehistoricwildlifecomimagesspeciestterr

Similar
  
Sphenosuchus, Hesperosuchus, Saltoposuchus, Sphenosuchia, Gracilisuchus

Pl2 fossil crocodiles terrestrisuchus


Terrestrisuchus ('land crocodile') is an extinct genus of early crocodylomorph that was about 50 cm (1 ft 8 in) long. Fossils have been found in the British Isles and date from the Late Triassic.

Contents

Terrestrisuchus Terrestrisuchus Wikipedia

Terrestrisuchus backbone


Description

Terrestrisuchus terrestrisuchus588jpg

Terrestrisuchus was a small, thin, lizard-like creature with long legs, bearing little to no resemblance to modern crocodiles, which are its distant relatives. It had a length of 0.75 to 1 metre (2.5 to 3.3 ft) and a weight of 15 kilograms (33 lb). The shape of the legs suggests that it was able to run fast. Its tail was particularly long, about twice the length of the head and body combined, and may have been used as a balance allowing the animal to rear up and run on its hind legs alone for brief periods.

Limbs

Terrestrisuchus Terrestrisuchus Paleontologists suspect that this tiny ins Flickr

The legs were positioned directly beneath the body, meaning ancestral crocodiles such as Terrestrisuchus were cursorial and thus, their legs worked as pairs for galloping. Pseudo-galloping can be seen in modern crocodiles as they are known to use paired walking in rare but speed-dependent situations. Fossil evidence also shows that they were digitigrade, supporting their weight on only digits, or fingers.

Classification

Some paleontologists suggest that Terrestrisuchus may be juvenile Saltoposuchus.

Terrestrisuchus FileTerrestrisuchusjpg Wikimedia Commons

Terrestrisuchus Crocodylomorpha fossil record

References

Terrestrisuchus Wikipedia


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