Rubeostratilia

Rubeostratilia
Temporal range: Early Permian
Restoration of Rubeostratilia texensis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: "Amphibia" (wide sense)
Order: Temnospondyli
Family: Amphibamidae
Genus: Rubeostratilia
Bourget and Anderson, 2011
Type species
Rubeostratilia texensis
Bourget and Anderson, 2011

Rubeostratilia is an extinct genus of amphibamid temnospondyl from the Early Permian of Texas. It is known from a single skull. This genus was named by Hélène Bourget and Jason S. Anderson in 2011, and the type species is Rubeostratilia texensis. Rubeostratilia is closely related to the genus Pasawioops from Richard's Spur, Oklahoma.[1]

Rubeostratilia has a rounded, elongate skull typical of amphibamids. Among its distinguishing characteristics are a sickle-shaped postfrontal bone, a short alary process (a ridge on the premaxilla), and a pterygoid bone on the palate that touches only the ectopterygoid.

References

  1. Bourget, Hélène; Anderson, Jason S. (2011). "A new amphibamid (Temnospondyli: Dissorophoidea) from the Early Permian of Texas". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 31 (1): 32–49. doi:10.1080/02724634.2011.539652.