Volume 56: 2023
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Festschrift in Honour of Professor Bruce S Rubidge
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Browsing Volume 56: 2023 by Author "Day, Michael O."
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Item A Tribute to Professor Bruce Sidney Rubidge(2023-07) Hancox, P. John; Day, Michael O.Professor Bruce Sidney Rubidge has published hundreds of articles and papers covering various aspects of the geology of the Cape and Karoo supergroups and their palaeontological signatures. His work has significantly advanced our understanding of numerous taxonomic groups, as well as the litho- and biostratigraphy of the Karoo Supergroup. He has also driven the robust radiometric dating of the lower half of the Karoo Supergroup, and via supervision and collaboration with postgraduate students, our understanding of the basin fill and the end-Guadalupian extinction in South Africa. Bruce has also supervised numerous honours, masters and doctoral students (Fig. 1) and provided strong research leadership to many South African and international collaborators. Bruce’s vision and dedication to first the Bernard Price Institute for Palaeontological Research (BPI) and now the Evolutionary Studies Institute (ESI) have guided it to become the connected 21st century establishment that it is today.Item Reappraisal of supposed ‘dinocephalian’ specimens expands burnetiamorph diversity in the Guadalupian Tapinocephalus Assemblage Zone of South Africa(2023-07) Day, Michael O.; Kammerer, Christian E.Burnetiids are a rare, yet seemingly species-rich family of therapsids in the rocks of the Karoo Basin of South Africa. Discoveries over the past 20 years have provided a greater understanding of the morphological variation within the group and have led to differing hypotheses of burnetiid phylogeny and that of their parent clade, Burnetiamorpha. One posits the existence within Burnetiidae of two subclades, Burnetiinae and Proburnetiinae, but this hypothesis invokes lengthy and thus problematic ghost lineages, particularly for proburnetiines. Herewereview and describe cranial material from the Capitanian Tapinocephalus Assemblage Zone that was previously referred to the dinocephalian therapsid Styracocephalus platyrhynchus, showing that it instead represents two new morphotypes of proburnetiine burnetiids. One of these, Nierkoppia brucei gen. et sp. nov., is diagnosed by the autapomorphic presence of a supraorbital boss ‘folded over’ the dorsal margin of the orbit, giving this structure a roughly ‘ear’ or ‘kidney’-shaped appearance; flattened, posteriorly directed squamosal horns; a median frontal boss taller than the supraorbital bosses, reaching itsmaximumheight anterior to them; and massive, rounded nuchal bosses borne on the postparietal and supraoccipital. The other specimen is left in open nomenclature due to incompleteness, but represents a heavily pachyostosed proburnetiine similar to Lende and Leucocephalus. The recovery of proburnetiines within theTapinocephalus Assemblage Zone shortens the ghost lineage of this clade and indicates that a diverse burnetiid fauna was present in the Guadalupian Karoo, comparable to that now known from Tanzania and Zambia.