FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26  
>>  
ock Lake shale, deposited under alternately marine and freshwater lagoon conditions, is a thin member of the Stanton limestone formation, Lansing group, Missourian series, and thus is in the lower part of the Upper Pennsylvanian. Peabody (1958) placed _Hesperoherpeton_ in the order Anthracosauria, suborder Embolomeri, family Cricotidae. Study of the second and more complete specimen reveals that _Hesperoherpeton_ is unlike the known Embolomeri in many important features. The limbs and braincase are more primitive than those so far described in any amphibian. The vertebrae are comparable to those of Ichthyostegalia (Jarvik, 1952), as well as to those of Embolomeri. The forelimb is transitional between the pectoral fin of Rhipidistia and the limb of early Amphibia. The pattern of the bones of the forelimb closely resembles, but is simpler than, that of the hypothetical transitional type suggested by Eaton (1951). The foot seemingly had only four short digits. The hind limb is not known. The new skeleton of _Hesperoherpeton_ lies in an oblong block of limy shale measuring approximately 100 x 60 mm. After preparation of the entire lower surface, the exposed bones and matrix were embedded in Bioplastic, in a layer thin enough for visibility but giving firm support. Then the specimen was inverted and the matrix removed from the opposite side; this has not been covered with Bioplastic. The bones lie in great disorder, except that some parts of the roof of the skull are associated, and the middle section of the vertebral column is approximately in place. The bones of the left forelimb are close together but not in a natural position. The tail, pelvis, hind limbs and right forelimb are missing. Nearly all the bones present are broken, distorted by crushing, incomplete and scattered out of place, probably by the action of currents. The complete skeleton, in life, probably measured between 150 and 200 mm. in length. The specimen was studied at the Museum of Natural History, University of Kansas, with the help of a grant from the National Science Foundation, number NSF-G8624. The specimen was discovered in the slab by Miss Sharon K. Moriarty, and was further cleaned by the authors. Mr. Merton C. Bowman assisted with the illustrations. We are indebted to Dr. Robert W. Wilson for critical comments. SKULL _Dorsal Aspect_ (Figs. 1, 2) In reconstruction, the skull measures approximately 8.0 mm. dorsoventrally at the post
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26  
>>  



Top keywords:

specimen

 

forelimb

 

Embolomeri

 

Hesperoherpeton

 

approximately

 

transitional

 

complete

 

Bioplastic

 

matrix

 
skeleton

position
 

illustrations

 

natural

 
pelvis
 

broken

 

distorted

 
crushing
 

incomplete

 
present
 

assisted


missing
 

Nearly

 

column

 

indebted

 

dorsoventrally

 

Robert

 

covered

 

disorder

 

middle

 

section


measures

 

critical

 

vertebral

 
scattered
 

number

 

Foundation

 

Science

 
Kansas
 

National

 
authors

Sharon
 
Aspect
 

Dorsal

 

cleaned

 

discovered

 

University

 

measured

 

currents

 
Bowman
 

action