Wits Evolutionary Studies Institute (ESI)
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Item A new middle Permian burnetiamorph (Therapsida: Biarmosuchia) from the South African Karoo filling a gap in the biarmosuchian record(The Evolutionary Studies Institute, 2024-09) Matlhaga, Fonda; Benoit, Julien; Rubidge, Bruce SBiarmosuchia, the most basal therapsid clade, is represented by relatively few specimens known from Permian deposits in Russia and southern Africa. In both the Guadalupian (middle Permian) and Lopingian (late Permian), biarmosuchians represent less than 1% of the fossil record at the specimen level. Here, we describe a new burnetiamorph biarmosuchian, Impumlophantsi boonstrai, based on a partial skull and associated postcrania from the upper Tapinocephalus Assemblage Zone. It is characterized by the presence of a low nasal crest with a unique morphology among burnetiamorphs. Inclusion of this taxon in an updated phylogenetic analysis of biarmosuchians indicates that this specimen is one of the most basal burnetiamorphs, representing the only record of this grade from the middle Permian.Item Re-identification and updated stratigraphic context of the holotypes of the late Permian tetrapods Dicynodon ingens and Scymnosaurus warreni from KwaZulu-Natal(Evolutionary Studies Institute, 2023) Groenewald, David P; Kammerer, Christian FTwo historical therapsid holotypes held in the collections of the KwaZulu-Natal Museum (Dicynodon ingens Broom, 1907 and Scymnosaurus warreni Broom, 1907) are redescribed. The holotype of D. ingens is a snout tip of a large dicynodontoid that can be re-identified as a specimen of Daptocephalus leoniceps based on premaxillary proportions and palatal morphology. The holotype of S. warreni consists of a dorsoventrally crushed therocephalian snout, which is here re-identified as that of Moschorhinus kitchingi based on size, general proportions, tooth count, and septomaxillary morphology. The localities of both specimens are biostratigraphically assigned to the Lystrosaurus maccaigi-Moschorhinus Subzone of the Daptocephalus Assemblage Zone (latest Permian).Item The first record of late Permian tetrapods from Namibia(Evolutionary Studies Institute, 2023) Mocke, Helke B; Kammerer, Christian F; Smith, Roger M H; Marsicano, Claudia AThe entire Omingonde Formation in Namibia was previously assigned a Triassic age based on the fossil tetrapod fauna discovered southwest of theWaterberg Plateau. However, recently repatriated and newly collected material suggests that the lowermost part of the Omingonde Formation includes late Permian strata, equivalent in age to the upper Endothiodon Assemblage Zone of the South African Karoo Basin. In this study,we document the first record of late Permian tetrapod fossils from Namibia, and provide brief descriptions of a gorgonopsian skull collected at Mount Etjo in 1996 and the skull of a small dicynodont collected at the same site in 2019, referable to cf. Tropidostoma. This material confirms that there is need for better understanding of the stratigraphy of the Etjo Mountain area, in particular the position and nature of the unconformity between strata of the Permian Endothiodon and the Triassic Cynognathus assemblage zones.Item New ‘rauisuchian’ fossil material from the lower Elliot Formation of South Africa(Evolutionary Studies Institute, 2023) Tolchard, Frederick B; Bordy, Emese M; Choiniere, Jonah N‘Rauisuchians’ are a grade of paracrocodylomorph archosaurs that evolved a diversity of body plans and played a key role in ecosystems worldwide throughout the Triassic. They are widely believed to have gone extinct during the end-Triassic mass extinction event though the fossil record of rauisuchians in the latest Triassic is still poorly known. In this study, we describe new rauisuchian fossil remains from the lower Elliot Formation of South Africa. Based on comparative anatomical evidence, we assign these specimens to the pseudosuchian clade Rauisuchidae. The addition of this material to the existing southern African fossil record allows us, along with some new insights into the taxonomic affinities of previously published material, to identify the presence of at least three distinct taxa of rauisuchian in the Norian of southern Africa: two of the clade Rauisuchidae; and one of the clade Poposauroidea. These likely filled the ecological role of apex predators in the Late Triassic of southern Africa. We also provide a revision of the stratigraphic record of ‘rauisuchians’ from the Elliot Formation and show that the existing record of rauisuchians in southern Africa, though among the youngest in the world, does not extend beyond the late Norian. Further exploration of the Elliot Formation and other terrestrial deposits at the Triassic–Jurassic boundary will be needed to assess whether rauisuchians survived until, or even beyond, the end-Triassic mass extinction event.