
Also known as Lagerpetonidae, Lagerpetid, Lagerpetids, Lagerpetonid, Lagerpetonids
Lagerpetidae (; originally Lagerpetonidae) is a family of basal avemetatarsalians (early-diverging members of the reptile lineage leading to birds and other dinosaurs). Though traditionally considered the earliest-diverging dinosauromorphs (archosaurs closer to dinosaurs than to pterosaurs), fossils described in 2020 suggested that lagerpetids are instead an early branch of pterosauromorphs (closer to pterosaurs than to dinosaurs). Lagerpetid fossils are known from the Triassic of San Juan (Argentina), Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas (United States), Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil), India and Madaga
FAMILY
Lagerpetonidae • Lagerpétidés Les Lagerpetidae (anciennement Lagerpetonidae, Lagerpétidés en français) sont une famille éteinte de dinosauromorphes basaux du Trias supérieur. Sommaire 1 Répartition géographique 2 Description 3 Phylogénie 4 Liste des genres 5 Notes et références 5.1 Références taxinomiques Répartition géographique Les restes fossiles des membres de cette famille ont été découverts en Argentine, au Brésil, aux États-Unis (Arizona, Nouveau-Mexique et Texas)[1],[2] et à Madagascar. Ils datent de 235 à 205 Ma[3]. Description Phylogénie Les Lagerpétidés sont un groupe proche des dinosaures, et plus proche encore des ptérosaures[3],[4]. Liste des genres Selon Paleobiology Database (12 octobre 2021)[5] : genre † Dromomeron Irmis et al., 2007 genre † Ixalerpeton Cabreira et al., 2016 genre † Kongonaphon Kammerer et al., 2020 genre † Lagerpeton Romer, 1971 Notes et références ↑ (en) Max C. Langer, Sterling J. Nesbitt, Jonathan S. Bittencourt et Randall B. Irmis, « Non-dinosaurian Dinosauromorpha », The Geological Society of, vol. 379, 2013, p. 157-186. ↑ (en) Sergio Cabreira, Alexander Kellner et al., « A Unique Late Triassic Dinosauromorph Assemblage Reveals Dinosaur Ances
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Lagerpetidae (; originally Lagerpetonidae) is a family of basal avemetatarsalians (early-diverging members of the reptile lineage leading to birds and other dinosaurs). Though traditionally considered the earliest-diverging dinosauromorphs (archosaurs closer to dinosaurs than to pterosaurs), fossils described in 2020 suggested that lagerpetids are instead an early branch of pterosauromorphs (closer to pterosaurs than to dinosaurs). Lagerpetid fossils are known from the Triassic of San Juan (Argentina), Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas (United States), Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil), India and Madagascar. Scleromochlus, a minuscule archosaur from Scotland, is sometimes regarded as a lagerpetid or close relative of the family.
Lagerpetids were generally small and lightly-built animals; the largest include Dromomeron gigas (from Argentina) and an indeterminate Dromomeron specimen from the Santa Rosa Formation of Texas, reaching a femoral length of , it is also possible that Alickmeron maleriensis (from India) could reach the same proportions as its upper partial femur was 6.5 cm and femoral condyle was about 4.3 cm in length. Lagerpetid fossils are rare; the most common finds are bones of the hindlimbs, which have a number of distinctive features. Remains from other parts of the body have accumulated more frequently since the late 2010s. Several species are now known to possess both small densely-backed teeth and a toothless beak at the tip of the snout.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).