Lissamphibian Origins: Possible Protolissamphibian from the Lower Permian of Oklahoma
- 14 November 1969
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 166 (3907) , 888-891
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.166.3907.888
Abstract
A new genus and family of rhachitomous labyrinthodont amphibian, related to the Upper Paleozoic Dissorophidae and Trematopsidae, may be ancestral to some or all of the modern Amphibia. Doleserpeton occurs in Lower Permian fissure fill deposits in southwestern Oklahoma. It is unique among nonlissamphibian tetrapods in that it possesses pedicellate, bicuspid teeth together with nearly monospondylous vertebrae in which the main central element is a pleurocentrum. Doleserpeton may have been utilizing the food resources of the upland, terrestrial environment in a novel fashion for rhachitomes.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- FOSSIL SALAMANDERS AND SALAMANDER ORIGINSAmerican Zoologist, 1965
- The Relationships of the Modern Amphibia: A Re-ExaminationThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1963
- The teeth of amphibia and their relation to amphibian phylogenyJournal of Morphology, 1962
- Gadow's Arcualia and the Development of Tetrapod VertebraeThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1959
- The Evolution of a Permian Vertebrate ChronofaunaEvolution, 1952
- MORPHOLOGISCHE UNTERSUCHUNGEN DER DECKKNOCHEN DESSCHÄDELS DER WIRBELTIEREActa Zoologica, 1935