Anoualerpeton

Anoualerpeton is an extinct genus of lissamphibian in the family Albanerpetontidae. Fossils have been found of two different species in Forest Marble and the Kilmaluag formations of England and Scotland, and the Ksar Metlili Formation of Morocco, which date back to the Bathonian stage of the Middle Jurassic and the Berriasian stage of the Early Cretaceous, respectively.

Anoualerpeton
Temporal range: 166–140 Ma Bathonian to Berriasian
A. unicus maxilla (top) and dentary (bottom)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Allocaudata
Family: Albanerpetontidae
Genus: Anoualerpeton
Gardner et al., 2003
Species
  • A. unicus Gardner et al., 2003 (type)
  • A. priscus Gardner et al., 2003

It is thought to be the most basal genus of the Albanerpetontids, and in the case of the species A. unicus, the only named albanerpetontid from Gondwana.[1]

Etymology

The name "Anoualerpeton" is composed of Anoual, the name of a city in the eastern High Atlas (Morocco), in whose relative proximity the type material of the type species Anoualerpeton unicus was found, and the ancient Greek word ἑρπετόν herpeton, which means 'creeping animal" and is often used in the generic names of fossil amphibians. The epithets "priscus" and "unicus" mean 'old' and 'unique', which refers to the fact that Anoualerpeton priscus is geologically the oldest albanerpetontid and Anoualerpeton unicus the only albanerpetontid that occurs on the former large southern continent of Gondwana.

Anoualerpeton priscus holotype premaxilla

Morphology

Anoualerpeton unicus holotype premaxilla

Anoualerpeton does not have any unique features (autapomorphies), but is characterized by a mosaic of features that occur either in Albanerpeton but not in Celtedens or in Celtedens but not in Albanerpeton. Thus, the occlusal margin of maxillary and dental teeth is convex in labial and lingual view, respectively, and the teeth in the middle third of the row are the longest, both of which are otherwise only known from the species Albanerpeton nexuosus. The processus internasalis of the azygic frontal, i.e. the end of the bone resulting from the fusion of the originally paired frontal structures, which is flanked by the nasal bone and points towards the tip of the snout, tapers to a point. The lateral edges of this process are designed as a kind of groove into which the edges of the nasalia engage (tongue-and-groove), both of which occur in Albanerpeton but not in Celtedens. In addition, the length-width ratio of the frontal is relatively large and the frontal is bell-shaped rather than triangular in dorsal and ventral view, features which Anoualerpeton shares only with Celtedens but not with Albanerpeton.

The two Anoualerpeton species differ primarily in the location of the suprapalatal pit. This is a depression in the inner side (lingual side) of that part of the premaxillary which reaches up to the roof of the skull (pars dorsalis). In Anoualerpeton priscus, the suprapalatal fossa lies in the medial edge of the external nasal opening. In Anoualerpeton unicus, however, it lies further mediad, outside the border of the external nasal opening.

Locality

As is common for Albanerpetontids, the remains of Anoualerpeton all come from so-called microvertebrate localities, i.e. isolated, relatively small bones obtained by slurrying and sieving samples of the sedimentary rock in which they were embedded. So far, Anoualerpeton is only known from the type localities of the two species.

The older species Anoualerpeton priscus originates from the Kirtlington Mammal Bed ("Kirtlington mammal layer") in the lowest part of the Forest Marble Formation of the Bathonian of Central England. The Kirtlington Mammal Bed is the most productive microvertebrate deposit of the Kirtlington Quarry, a limestone quarry west of Kirtlington, about 15 kilometers north of Oxford. It consists of a weakly consolidated clayey marl, which was probably deposited in a swampy environment and contains, among other things, teeth of dinosaurs and early mammalia forms.The material from Kirtlington, classified as Anoualerpeton priscus, was formerly assigned to the genera Albanerpeton or Celtedens.

The younger species Anoualerpeton unicus, which is also a type species of the genus, was identified in the microvertebrate fauna of the Ksar Met Lili Formation in the eastern High Atlas. The locality is located in the south of the Talsint province of Morocco, about 100 kilometers east of the city of Anoual. The deposit is located in a lens of non-marine limestone embedded in marine sediments in the upper part of the so-called Couches Rouges ("red layers"). These marine sediments have been uncertainly dated by coccolithophorids on Berriasian, but have also been considered Tithonian. Also in Ksar Met Lili dinosaurs can be found and, due to the lower geological age, also representatives of the mammalian crown group (Mammalia).

References

  1. Gardner, J.D., Evans, S.E., and Sigogneau−Russell, D. (2003). New albanerpetontid amphibians from the Early Cretaceous of Morocco and Middle Jurassic of England. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 48(2): 301–319.


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