Californosaurus

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Californosaurus
Fossil range: Late Triassic
Californosaurus perrini
Californosaurus perrini
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Sauropsida
Subclass: ?Diapsida
Order: Ichthyopterygia
Suborder: Shastasauria
Family: Teretochemidae
Genus: Californosaurus
Kuhn, 1934
Species
  • C. perrini

Californosaurus perrini ('Perrin's California lizard') was an ichthyosaur, an extinct fish-like marine reptile, from the Lower Hosselkus Limestone (Carnian, Late Triassic) of California. It has also been known as Shastasaurus perrini and Delphinosaurus ('dolphin lizard') perrini. It is the basal-most known true icthyosaur (Euichthyosauria). The long-snouted head is small in comparison with the rest of the

Californosaurus with a human to scale.
Californosaurus with a human to scale.

body, as in basal ichthyosaurs such as Mixosaurus and Cymbospondylus. The tail is sharply turned downwards, in common with more advanced ichthyosaurs, with a small vertical fluke. It may have had a small dorsal fin. There is a small number of pre-sacral vertebrae (45 or 50). The phalanges (digit bones) are circular and widely spaced, giving the flipper a round appearance. It was 3 metres long. It fed on fish and other small marine creatures. Like other ichthyosaurs it probably never ventured onto dry land, and gave birth in the water.


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Palaeos Vertebrates [[1]]

Ichthyosaurus [[2]]