Eosuchus lerichei Dollo, 1907

Delfino, Massimo, Piras, Paolo & Smith, Thierry, 2005, Anatomy and phylogeny of the gavialoid crocodylian Eosuchus lerichei from the Paleocene of Europe, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 50 (3), pp. 565-580 : 567-568

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13620776

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A34F87F8-6764-775B-2478-F974964AF818

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Eosuchus lerichei Dollo, 1907
status

 

Eosuchus lerichei Dollo, 1907

Holotype: Specimen IRSNB R 49 View Materials is represented by a nearly complete skull ( Figs. 2–4 View Fig View Fig View Fig ), an incomplete lower jaws ( Fig. 5 View Fig ), the axis ( Fig. 6A View Fig ), three cervical vertebrae, an isolated neural arch, three ribs, a fragmentary ulna and radius, a carpal element and fourteen osteoderms (or their fragments; Fig. 6B View Fig ). All the remains seem to belong to one single individual.

Type locality: Jeumont (Maubeuge, Nord Department), France. The locality, few meters far from the Franco−Belgian border, is part of the well known fossiliferous area of Erquelinnes, Belgium.

Horizon and age: Grandglise Member, Hannut Formation, Thanetian, upper Paleocene.

Emended diagnosis.— Eosuchus lerichei can be distinguished from E. minor by the axis neural arch devoid of any lateral process, a relatively slender postorbital bar, the presence of the triple junction between frontal, parietal and postorbital on the skull table, ectopterygoids separated from the toothrow by maxilla and palatine anterior process showing a irregular morphology that can be assimilated to a U−shaped condition. Nasals are relatively narrower and frontal process slightly longer than in E. minor .

Moreover, the holotype —and only known specimen— shows 5 premaxillary (see description), 16/17 maxillary and at least 22 dentary teeth; the symphysis reaches posteriorly the sixteenth tooth position; teeth have a peculiar shape since they do not show any evident labio−lingual compression or mesio−distal keels but several ridges of similar development occurring on the entire crown surface.

IRSNB

Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Class

Reptilia

Genus

Eosuchus

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