On Ossirarus kierani, a stem tetrapod from the Tournaisian of Burnmouth, Berwickshire, Scotland, and the phylogeny of early tetrapods
Recent discoveries in the Scottish Borders have greatly expanded our knowledge of post-Devonian tetrapods. Six new taxa have been named and briefly described so far. One of these, Ossirarus kierani, is represented by a single specimen from the coastal section of the Tournaisian Ballagan Formation at Burnmouth. It comprises the disarticulated bones of the posterior half of the skull, the anterior portion of the axial skeleton, and parts of the pectoral girdle and forelimbs. It is relatively small, with an estimated skull length of 54 mm. Like some Devonian tetrapods it has a preopercular and a lateral line system represented by pores. It shares with embolomeres, a tabular-parietal suture, an intertemporal and a long tabular horn. The gastrocentrous vertebrae resemble those of Caerorhachis and the brachial foramen pierces the humerus through the posterior edge, as in Mesanerpeton. Phylogenetic analyses place Ossirarus on the tetrapod stem-group, crownward of some – but not all – Devonian taxa. The topology of the tetrapod stem suggests that numerous lineages of Carboniferous tetrapods extended back into the Devonian
History
School affiliated with
- Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)
- School of Natural Sciences (Research Outputs)
- College of Health and Science (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
Fossil RecordVolume
27Issue
3Pages/Article Number
333-352Publisher
Pensoft PublishersExternal DOI
ISSN
2193-0066eISSN
2193-0074Date Submitted
2024-04-28Date Accepted
2024-10-07Date of First Publication
2024-12-30Date of Final Publication
2024-12-30Open Access Status
- Open Access