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Teratosaurus
Fossil range: Late Triassic, 216–204 Ma
Teratosaurus BW
Teratosaurus suevicus
Scientific classification

Kingdom:

Animalia

Phylum:

Chordata

Class:

Reptilia

Infraclass:

Archosauromorpha

(Unranked) :

Crurotarsi

Order:

Rauisuchia

Family:

Rauisuchidae

Genus:

Teratosaurus
von Meyer, 1861

Species:

  • T. suevicus
    von Meyer, 1861 (type)

Teratosaurus (Gr. teras "monster" + sauros "lizard") was a genus of rauisuchian known from the Triassic Stubensandstein (Löwenstein Formation - Norian age) of Germany. The type specimen was described by von Meyer on the basis of a left maxilla (upper jaw bone) with large teeth, which he declared to be distinct from Belodon.

"Teratosaurus" silesiacus (now )

"Teratosaurus" silesiacus (now Polonosuchus silesiacus)

Later authors, such as von Huene, Osborn, and Edwin H. Colbert, incorrectly attributed postcrania of the sauropodomorph dinosaur Efraasia to this species, and as a result it was thought to be a very primitive theropod. Following this lead, many popular books in the 20th century depicted "Teratosaurs" as the earliest sort of large bodied meat-eating dinosaur, walking on two legs and preying on the prosauropods of its day. It was thought by many to be a Triassic ancestor to the carnosaurs of the Jurassic.

In 1985 and 1986 Peter Galton and Michael Benton independently showed that Teratosaurus is actually a nondinosaurian rauisuchian, a type of large predatory archosaur which lived alongside dinosaurs during the Late Triassic.[1][2]

T. silesiacus, described in 2005 by Tomasz Sulej,[3] was transferred to genus Polonosuchus by Brussatte et al. in 2009.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ Galton, P. M. (1985). "The poposaurid thecodontian Teratosaurus suevicus von Meyer, plus referred specimens mostly based on prosauropod dinosaurs". Stuttgarter Beitrage zur Naturkunde, B, 116: 1-29.
  2. ^ Benton, M.J. (1986). "The late Triassic reptile Teratosaurus - a rauisuchian, not a dinosaur". Palaeontology 29: 293-301.
  3. ^ Sulej, T. (2005). "A new rauisuchian reptile (Diapsida: Archosauria) from the Late Triassic of Poland." Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 25(1):78-86.
  4. ^ Brusatte, Stephen L.; Butler, Richard J.; Sulej, Tomasz; Niedźwiedzki, Grzegorz (2009). "The taxonomy and anatomy of rauisuchian archosaurs from the Late Triassic of Germany and Poland". Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 54 (2): 221–230. 


External links[]