A newly discovered skull of the temnospondyl amphibian Dendrerpeton acadianum Owen

Abstract
A virtually complete three-dimensional skull of a subadult of the temnospondyl amphibian Dendrerpeton acadianum provides new information on the structure of the palate and lower jaw. The left stapes appears to lie in a natural position on the quadrate ramus of the pterygoid. The proportionately large otic ossicle probably precluded it from having acted as a transmitter of airborne vibrations from a tympanum to the inner ear. The use of the term "otic notch" should be restricted to amphibians or reptiles in which the embayment of the posterior margin of the cheek is accompanied by the presence of a slender rod-like stapes that could have functioned as part of an impedance matching system. In those species in which a notch is present but the stapes is a massive "supporting" element, the term "squamosal embayment" should be used, rather than "otic notch." The squamosal embayment in early tetrapods may have been inherited directly from their fish ancestors and had no functional relationship to hearing.