Prestosuchus

Prestosuchus
Temporal range: Late Triassic
Cast of a skeleton of Prestosuchus chiniquensis (AMNH 3856) in the American Museum of Natural History
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Family: Prestosuchidae
Genus: Prestosuchus
von Huene, 1942
Type species
Prestosuchus chiniquensis
von Huene, 1942

Prestosuchus is an extinct genus of pseudosuchian in the family Prestosuchidae. Its close relatives include Saurosuchus and Postosuchus.

Description

Restoration of Prestosuchus chiniquensis
Restoration of Prestosuchus chiniquensis

Like other related prestosuchids, Prestosuchus had a deep skull and serrated teeth. Prestosuchus lived during the Late Triassic in what is now Brazil. It reached lengths of nearly 5 metres. While it resembled a dinosaur in having a large body and upright posture it was actually a rauisuchian archosaur more closely related to modern crocodilians.

Prestosuchus walked on four legs like crocodilians, but unlike crocodilians it had an upright semi-erect stance with limb bones placed below the hips. In 2013, a study of the structure of its hind limb bones inferred that Prestosuchus chiniquensis had 13 leg muscle groups in common with both crocodilians and birds (which together make up the two living groups of archosaurs) but only two muscle groups in common with only crocodilians, indicating that the musculature of Prestosuchus better represents a basal ("primitive") condition for archosaurs than it does a derived condition for crocodile-line or pseudosuchian archosaurs. The leg musculature of Prestosuchus was also compared to that of Poposaurus, a Triassic pseudosuchian that walked on two legs. While the strongest leg muscles of Poposaurus are thought to drive the forward and backward motion of the leg necessary for bipedal movement, the strongest leg muscles of Prestosuchus were responsible for the rotation of the limb, which is an indication of quadrupedal movement.[1]

History of study

Replica made by "Clóvis Dapper" in Floriball park in Canela.

Prestosuchus chiniquensis was discovered in the Paleontological Site Chiniquá, near the city of São Pedro do Sul in 1938, by the German paleontologist Friedrich von Huene on a trip to Brazil. Von Huene named the genus in honor of Vicentino Prestes de Almeida. This site is located in the geopark of Paleorrota.[2] A remarkably complete skeleton, with a well-preserved hind leg, was discovered at Dona Francisca in Rio Grande do Sul by a team of paleontologists from the Universidade Luterana do Brasil and published in 2010.[3]

The cladogram below follows an analysis by Sterling J. Nesbitt (2011):[4]

Archosauria 

Avemetatarsalia


 Pseudosuchia 

Ornithosuchidae


 Suchia 

Gracilisuchus



Turfanosuchus




Revueltosaurus



Aetosauria





Ticinosuchus


 Paracrocodylomorpha 

Poposauroidea


 Loricata 

Prestosuchus




Saurosuchus




Batrachotomus




Fasolasuchus



Rauisuchidae

Rauisuchus




Polonosuchus



Postosuchus





Crocodylomorpha












Notes and references

  1. Liparini, A.; Schultz, C. L. (2013). "A reconstruction of the thigh musculature of the extinct pseudosuchian Prestosuchus chiniquensis from the Dinodontosaurus Assemblage Zone (Middle Triassic Epoch), Santa Maria 1 Sequence, southern Brazil". Geological Society, London, Special Publications. doi:10.1144/SP379.20.
  2. Picture and informations about of Prestosuchus chiniquensis (UFRGS)
  3. (UK Daily Mail) "World's most complete fossil of pre-dinosaur predator discovered": accessed 1113 May 2010.
  4. Sterling J. Nesbitt (2011). "The Early Evolution of Archosaurs: Relationships and the Origin of Major Clades" (PDF). Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 352: 1–292. doi:10.1206/352.1.

See also


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