Post by stemturtle on Nov 29, 2010 15:59:57 GMT
In 2011 Safari will release a toob of ten prehistoric crocodilians. Have a look: dinotoyforum.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=toys&action=display&thread=3314 Let’s see how these species are related to dinosaurs. Three photos review the archosauromorphs that have already been manufactured. Each clade is illustrated with only one example, rather than attempting a complete listing. Additional figures can be seen in the Collections topic: Before the Dinosaurs Pt 3 : Triassic.
We simplify a cladogram based on the Palaeos website
www.palaeos.com/Vertebrates/Lists/Cladograms/300Archosauromorpha.html.
Finally, we comment on the Toob (numbered) figures.
Nobody knows where the ancestor of turtles fits in here, probably not more recently than about 235 MYA.
ARCHOSAUROMORPHA
Choristodera - (1) Champsosaurus
Rhynchosauria - Scaphonyx
Trilophosauridae - Trilophosaurus
Prolacertiformes - Tanystropheus
Archosauriformes - next
Archosauriformes
Proterosuchidae - (2) Chasmatosaurus
Erythrosuchidae - Erythrosuchus
Euparkeriidae - (3) Euparkaria
Archosauria - next
Archosauria
Ornithodira - Pterosauria, Dinosauromorpha
(These clades are so popular that we will not elaborate here.)
Crurotarsi - next
Toob Figures
1. Champsosaurus has never before been released as a figure. Similar to a gharial, about 5 feet long, it lived from the Cretaceous to the Eocene. Bruce Ericson of the Science Museum of Minnesota is an authority on these obscure crocodilians.
2. Chasmatosaurus was a star in the video, “Walking with Monsters.” It will be a more realistic alternative to the Yowie’s Tasmaniosaurus. Proterosuchids survived the Permian extinction. I would buy the toob for this figure alone.
3. Euparkaria was available only as a Starlux figure. This is another basal archosaur, an early attempt at bipedality, also a movie star like Chasmatosaurus.
4, 5, 6. Rutiodon, Postosuchus, and Desmatosuchus were already represented with excellent figures. It seems that every set of figures has its repeats. Will the new figures surpass the old ones? I would trade all 3 for a Mesosaurus, which is actually an anapsid, with convergent body shape.
7. Dakosaurus was a marine croc, up to 15 feet in length, Jurassic. Legs served as fins. Previous to this new species, we had Metriorhychus.
8. Montealtosuchus was terrestrial, less than 6 feet long, late Cretaceous. This animal reverted to the original lifestyle of crocodilians, long-legged, and fast moving.
9. Sarchosuchus, available from Procon CollectA, reached 40 feet, 112 MYA, may have fed on dinosaurs. The SuperCroc was featured in a National Geographic special with Paul Sereno.
10. Pristichampsus terrorized London in BBC’s ”Primeval.” Its toes were hoofed, length about 10 feet, 50-40 MYA. One has to wonder how the crocs survived the K-T extinction when the nonavian dinosaurs did not.
We eagerly await the new species: a few wonderful basal forms, and new examples of the crocodylomorph clades. Thanks, Safari!
We simplify a cladogram based on the Palaeos website
www.palaeos.com/Vertebrates/Lists/Cladograms/300Archosauromorpha.html.
Finally, we comment on the Toob (numbered) figures.
Nobody knows where the ancestor of turtles fits in here, probably not more recently than about 235 MYA.
ARCHOSAUROMORPHA
Choristodera - (1) Champsosaurus
Rhynchosauria - Scaphonyx
Trilophosauridae - Trilophosaurus
Prolacertiformes - Tanystropheus
Archosauriformes - next
Archosauriformes
Proterosuchidae - (2) Chasmatosaurus
Erythrosuchidae - Erythrosuchus
Euparkeriidae - (3) Euparkaria
Archosauria - next
Archosauria
Ornithodira - Pterosauria, Dinosauromorpha
(These clades are so popular that we will not elaborate here.)
Crurotarsi - next
Crurotarsi
Phytosauridae - (4) Rutiodon
Rauisuchia
- Ornithosuchidae - Ornithosuchus
- Prestosuchidae - Saurosuchus
- Rauisuchidae - (5) Postosuchus
- Poposauridae - Arizonasaurus
Suchia
- Aetosauridae - (6) Desmatosuchus
- Crocodylomorpha - next
Crocodylomorpha
Sphenosuchia - Saltoposuchus
Crocodyliformes
- Protosuchus
- Mesoeucrocodylia
-- Thalattosuchia
----- Metriorhynchidae - (7) Dakosaurus
-- Metasuchia
----- Peirosauridae - (8) Montealtosuchus
-- Neosuchia
---- Pholidosauridae - (9) Sarchosuchus
---- Mahajangasuchidae - Kaprosuchus (in 2011)
-- Eusuchia
---- Pristichampsidae - (10) Pristichampsus
---- Crocodylia
------- Alligatoridae - Deinosuchus
Phytosauridae - (4) Rutiodon
Rauisuchia
- Ornithosuchidae - Ornithosuchus
- Prestosuchidae - Saurosuchus
- Rauisuchidae - (5) Postosuchus
- Poposauridae - Arizonasaurus
Suchia
- Aetosauridae - (6) Desmatosuchus
- Crocodylomorpha - next
Crocodylomorpha
Sphenosuchia - Saltoposuchus
Crocodyliformes
- Protosuchus
- Mesoeucrocodylia
-- Thalattosuchia
----- Metriorhynchidae - (7) Dakosaurus
-- Metasuchia
----- Peirosauridae - (8) Montealtosuchus
-- Neosuchia
---- Pholidosauridae - (9) Sarchosuchus
---- Mahajangasuchidae - Kaprosuchus (in 2011)
-- Eusuchia
---- Pristichampsidae - (10) Pristichampsus
---- Crocodylia
------- Alligatoridae - Deinosuchus
Toob Figures
1. Champsosaurus has never before been released as a figure. Similar to a gharial, about 5 feet long, it lived from the Cretaceous to the Eocene. Bruce Ericson of the Science Museum of Minnesota is an authority on these obscure crocodilians.
2. Chasmatosaurus was a star in the video, “Walking with Monsters.” It will be a more realistic alternative to the Yowie’s Tasmaniosaurus. Proterosuchids survived the Permian extinction. I would buy the toob for this figure alone.
3. Euparkaria was available only as a Starlux figure. This is another basal archosaur, an early attempt at bipedality, also a movie star like Chasmatosaurus.
4, 5, 6. Rutiodon, Postosuchus, and Desmatosuchus were already represented with excellent figures. It seems that every set of figures has its repeats. Will the new figures surpass the old ones? I would trade all 3 for a Mesosaurus, which is actually an anapsid, with convergent body shape.
7. Dakosaurus was a marine croc, up to 15 feet in length, Jurassic. Legs served as fins. Previous to this new species, we had Metriorhychus.
8. Montealtosuchus was terrestrial, less than 6 feet long, late Cretaceous. This animal reverted to the original lifestyle of crocodilians, long-legged, and fast moving.
9. Sarchosuchus, available from Procon CollectA, reached 40 feet, 112 MYA, may have fed on dinosaurs. The SuperCroc was featured in a National Geographic special with Paul Sereno.
10. Pristichampsus terrorized London in BBC’s ”Primeval.” Its toes were hoofed, length about 10 feet, 50-40 MYA. One has to wonder how the crocs survived the K-T extinction when the nonavian dinosaurs did not.
We eagerly await the new species: a few wonderful basal forms, and new examples of the crocodylomorph clades. Thanks, Safari!