Styracocephalus
Styracocephalus platyrhynchus ('spike head') is an extinct species of tapinocephalian therapsids that lived during the Guadalupian epoch.
Styracocephalus | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Clade: | Therapsida |
Suborder: | †Dinocephalia |
Family: | †Styracocephalidae |
Genus: | †Styracocephalus Haughton, 1929 |
Species: | †S. platyrhynchus |
Binomial name | |
†Styracocephalus platyrhynchus Haughton, 1929 | |
Styracocephalus's head ornament meant that it could be recognised from a distance. The most striking feature of Styracocephalus are the large backward-protruding tabular horns.[1]
The crest stuck upwards and backwards, but there is some variation in its shape, and this suggests that it changed throughout life and that it may be sexually dimorphic. Styracocephalus was a herbivore that may have been fully terrestrial or partly aquatic like the modern hippopotamus. It may have evolved from the estemmenosuchids.
Its remains are known from South Africa but it probably had a wider distribution.
It was around 1.8 metres (5 ft 11 in) in length,[2] with a 42-centimetre-long (17 in), 29-centimetre-wide (11 in) skull.[3]
See also
References
- The Origin and Evolution of Mammals (Oxford Biology) by T. S. Kemp
- Palaeos, Styracocephalus