Nothosaur

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Nothosaurs
Fossil range: Triassic
Nothosaurus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Sauropsida
Superorder: Sauropterygia
Order: Nothosauroidea
Baur, 1889
Suborders

Nothosauria
Pachypleurosauria

Nothosaurs (order Nothosauroidea) were Triassic marine sauropterygian reptiles that may have lived like seals of today, catching food in water but coming ashore on rocks and beaches. They averaged about three meters in length, with a long body and tail. The feet had become paddle-like, and were most certainly webbed in life, to help power the animal when swimming. The neck was quite long, and the head was elongate and flattened, and relatively small in relation to the body. The margins of the long jaws were equipped with numerous sharp outward-pointing teeth, indicating a diet of fish.

The nothosaurs consist of two suborders--the Pachypleurosaurs, tiny, primitive forms, and the true Nothosaurs, which evolved from pachypleurosaurs. Nothosaur-like reptiles were in turn ancestral to the more completely marine plesiosaurs, which replaced them at the end of the Triassic period.

Lariosaurus, a member of the family Nothosauridae.
Lariosaurus, a member of the family Nothosauridae.

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