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Milosaurus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Extinct genus of synapsids
Not to be confused withMilo dinosaur.

Milosaurus
Life reconstruction ofMilosaurus mccordi
Scientific classificationEdit this classification
Domain:Eukaryota
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Clade:Synapsida
Clade:Eupelycosauria
Clade:Metopophora
Clade:Haptodontiformes
Genus:Milosaurus
DeMar, 1970
Type species
Milosaurus mccordi
DeMar, 1970

Milosaurus is an extinctgenus of non-mammaliansynapsids native toIllinois that was alive during thelatest Carboniferous andearliest Permian.[1][2] It was named in 1970 on the basis of FMNH 701, a partial skeleton, as well as referred material.[3]

Discovery

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Theholotype ofMilosaurus was found in the Falmouth locality inJasper County, Illinois. At the time, the discovery was only the secondsphenacodont found in Illinois, the first beingMacromerion.[3] Since then the assignment ofMilosaurus to Sphenacodontia has been refuted.[4]

The nameMilosaurusmccordi refers to Milo Flynn and Chester McCord, the men on whose property the fossils were found.[3]

The material recovered from the area includes the holotype, which consists of a pelvis, hind limb and pes, and caudal vertebrae. Referred material from nearby was also recovered and were thought to possibly be from the same individual which consisted of a lumbar vertebra, a neural spine, a "rib", and a piece of maxilla with teeth.[3] The validity of this referred material has been debated.[4] The main reason this material was referred toMilosaurus was because at the time there had been no other known synapsid discoveries in the area, leading to the assumption that all discovered material belonged toMilosaurus.[3] However, since the 1970 publication, an undescribed neural spine that belongs to anedaphosaurid has been found in the area.[4] Additionally, the maxilla and poorly-described neural arch have since been lost.[3][4]

The "rib" was later identified as actually being a femur much smaller than the holotype, indicating it may be from a juvenileMilosaurus.[4]

Description

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Milosaurus was one of the largest synapsids of its time, estimated to have weighed around 41 kilograms. It may be a third example of large body size developing in synapsids in the Carboniferous, the other two instances being herbivorous edaphosaurids and then sphenacodontids.[4] Like its close relativeIanthodon, it would likely have a relatively tall snout and, as is common for early non-mammalian synapsids, a sprawling posture.[5]

Classification

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Milosaurus was recovered within the Haptodontiformes which currently includesIanthodon. However, due to the known material ofMilosaurus andIanthodon, it is impossible to determine their relationship to each other.Milosaurus can confidently be placed outside of the clade containing Edaphosauridae and Sphenacodontia because of the lack of a anterodorsal expansion on its ilium and the presence of a groove on its dorsal surface.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^The main groups of non-mammalian synapsids at Mikko's Phylogeny Archive
  2. ^R. R. Reisz. 1986.Pelycosauria.Handbuch der Paläoherpetologie/Encyclopedia of Paleoherpetology 17A:1-102
  3. ^abcdefR. DeMar. 1970. A primitive pelycosaur from the Pennsylvanian of Illinois.Journal of Paleontology 44(1):154-163
  4. ^abcdefgBrocklehurst, Neil; Fröbisch, Jörg (2018-09-03)."A reexamination of Milosaurus mccordi , and the evolution of large body size in Carboniferous synapsids".Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.38 (5): e1508026.Bibcode:2018JVPal..38E8026B.doi:10.1080/02724634.2018.1508026.ISSN 0272-4634.S2CID 91487577.
  5. ^Spindler, F.; Scott, D.; Reisz, R. R. (2014-10-06)."New information on the cranial and postcranial anatomy of the early synapsid <i>Ianthodon schultzei</i> (Sphenacomorpha: Sphenacodontia), and its evolutionary significance".Fossil Record.18 (1):17–30.doi:10.5194/fr-18-17-2015.ISSN 2193-0074.
Tetrapodomorpha
Reptiliomorpha
Synapsida
    • see below↓
Caseasauria?
Eothyrididae
Caseidae
Varanopidae?
Mesenosaurinae
Varanodontinae
Metopophora
    • see below↓
Incertae sedis
Ennatosaurus tectonVaranodon agilis
Ophiacodontidae
Edaphosauridae
Palaeohatteriidae
Sphenacodontoidea
Sphenacodontidae
Therapsida
    • see below↓
Clepsydrops colletii

Gordodon kraineri

Secodontosaurus obtusidens
Biarmosuchia
Dinocephalia
Anomodontia
Gorgonopsia
Eutheriodontia
Therocephalia
Cynodontia
Incertae sedis
Raranimus dashankouensis
Milosaurus


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