Palaeontologia africana

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ISSN (print): 0078-8554 ISSN (electronic): 2410-4418 For queries regarding content of Palaeontologia africana collections please contact Jonah Choiniere by email : jonah.choiniere@wits.ac.za or Tel : 011 717 6684

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    Cranial morphology of Jonkeria truculenta (Therapsida, Dinocephalia) and a taxonomic reassessment of the family Titanosuchidae
    (The Evolutionary Studies Institute, 2024-06) Jirah, Sifelani; Rubide, Bruce S; Abdala, Fernando
    Titanosuchidae are a group of herbivorous, long-snouted dinocephalians with definitive records known only from the middle Permian Tapinocephalus Assemblage Zone of the Beaufort Group (Karoo Supergroup) of South Africa. Here, the taxonomy of this family is revised; of the nine species currently recognized, only two are found to be valid: Titanosuchus ferox and Jonkeria truculenta, which can be distinguished on the basis of appendicular proportions. Jonkeria boonstrai, J. haughtoni, J. ingens, J. parva, J. rossouwi, and J. vanderbyli are synonymized with Jonkeria truculenta, and J. koupensis is considered a nomen dubium (Titanosuchidae indet.). Several new cranial features are described for J. truculenta, such as pachyostosis of the prefrontals, postorbitals and parietals, and an ontogenetic series for the species is presented.
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    Cranial morphology of Jonkeria truculenta (Titanosuchidae, Therapsida, Dinocephalia) and a taxonomic reassessment of the family
    (Evolutionary Studies Institute, 2023) Jirah, Sifelani; Rubidge, Bruce S; Abdala, Fernando
    Titanosuchidae are a group of derived herbivorous long snouted dinocephalians currently only known from the South African Karoo. Taxonomic revision of the Titanosuchids, for the first time accompanied by detailed anatomical descriptions and illustrations of representative cranial material, enabled recognition of only two species out of the nine previously recognized. These are Titanosuchus ferox and Jonkeria truculenta. Jonkeria vanderbyli, Jonkeria ingens, Jonkeria haughtoni, Jonkeria parva, Jonkeria rossouwi and Jonkeria boonstrai are here, synonymized with Jonkeria truculenta. The species Jonkeria koupensis is a nomen dubium only identified as Titanosuchid indet. Cranial characters, which modify during ontogenetic development, were, recognized for Jonkeria truculenta, and for the first time an ontogenetic growth series is, presented for this species.
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    Postcranial morphology of the South African middle Permian pareiasaurs from the Karoo Basin of South Africa
    (Evolutionary Studies Institute, 2021-05-28) van den Brandt, Marc J.; Benoit, Julien; Abdala, Fernando; Rubidge, Bruce S.
    Pareiasaurs were relatively abundant and globally distributed herbivorous parareptiles of the middle to late Permian. The basal-most pareiasaurs, the Bradysauria, are restricted to the middle Permian of South Africa and went extinct at the end of the Guadalupian (Capitanian) at the top of the Tapinocephalus Assemblage Zone. Currently, three genera are recognized in this group: Bradysaurus, Embrithosaurus and Nochelesaurus, but their postcrania are poorly known, and consequently poorly understood. In this paper, our third contribution designed to improve understanding of the Bradysauria, we present a detailed comparative postcranial description and updated diagnoses for Bradysaurus baini, Embrithosaurus schwarzi and Nochelesaurus alexanderi. Bradysaurus baini has one postcranial autapomorphy: anterior dorsal osteoderms smooth and strongly convex, with an incipient central boss, and very light ornamentation. Three pelvic autopomorphies of Embrithosaurus schwarzi are confirmed: anterior portion of the iliac blades flat and vertical (not everted or upturned); iIiac blades diverge anteriorly, oriented at 45–60° off the sagittal plane; and a very thick pelvic symphysis. For Nochelesaurus alexanderi we remove all three of the postcranial autapomorphies previously proposed. To the diagnoses of each species, we have added several new distinguishing postcranial features, within the local group of middle Permian pareiasaurs. The results reinforce our previous cranial studies concluding that three valid species of pareiasaurs are represented in the South African middle Permian.
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    Cranial morphology and taxonomy of South African Tapinocephalidae (Therapsida: Dinocephalia): the case of Avenantia and Riebeeckosaurus
    (Evolutionary Studies Institute, University of the Witwatersrand, 2013-12-18) Guven, Saniye; Rubidge, Bruce S.; Abdala, Fernando
    Tapinocephalid dinocephalians comprise a large component of Middle Permian herbivorous tetrapod biodiversity and are significantly abundant in the Karoo rocks of SouthAfrica. In order to understand the effect of the alleged Middle Permian extinction in the terrestrial record of amniotes a clear understanding of the taxonomic diversity of this group is essential. The tapinocephalids Avenantia kruisvleiensis and Riebeeckosaurus longirostris have in the past been distinguished by a set of characters, including differences in the snout length which was previously interpreted as a key diagnostic character. Further preparation of the material attributed to these species shows that the purported distinguishing characters, such as snout length, low intertemporal crest, and surface thickening of the parietal represent postmortem deformation (including distortion and weathering) or can be interpreted as individual or ontogenetic variation. Accordingly A. kruisvleiensis is synonimized with R. longirostris.