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Anthracosauria
Fossil range: Late Devonian-Early Triassic
Scientific classification

Superclass

Tetrapoda

Superorder

Reptiliomorpha

Order

Anthracosauria
Säve-Söderbergh, 1934

Groups




Anthracosauria refers to a group of extinct reptile-like amphibians that flourished during the Carboniferous and Early Permian periods, although precisely which species are included depends on one's definition of the taxon.

As originally defined by Säve-Söderbergh in 1934, the anthracosaurs, are a group of usually large aquatic Amphibia from the Carboniferous and lower Permian. As defined by Alfred Sherwood Romer however, the anthracosaurs include all non-amniote "Labyrinthodont" reptile-like amphibians, and Säve-Söderbergh's definition is more equivalent to Romer's suborder Embolomeri. This definition was also used by Edwin H. Colbert and Robert L. Carroll in their textbooks of Vertebrate Palaeontology (Colbert 1969, Carroll 1988). Dr A. L. Panchen however restored the anthracosaurs to Säve-Söderbergh's original definition (Panchen 1970).

With the cladistic revolution things have changed again. Michel Laurin (1996) uses the term in a cladistic sense to refer to only the most reptile-like tetrapods (no longer considered related to modern amphibians) (Diadectomorpha and Solenodonsauridae) and the Amniotes. But Michael Benton (2000, 2004) makes the Anthracosaurs a paraphyletic order within the superorder Reptiliomorpha, along with the orders Seymouriamorpha and Diadectomorpha.

Etymology[]

The name "Anthracosauria" is Greek ('coal lizards'), because many of its fossils were found in the Coal Measures.

References and external links[]