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Pelycosaur
order of tetrapods / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pelycosaurs (meaning "basin lizards") were the earliest synapsids. They were not dinosaurs or reptiles. They are an informal group which were once called the "mammal-like reptiles". The term is only used informally, if at all, in the modern scientific literature.
Pelycosaurs Temporal range: Upper Carboniferous – Upper Permian | |
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Dimetrodon grandis skeleton at the National Museum of Natural History | |
Scientific classification | |
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Order: | Pelycosauria * Cope, 1878 |
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†Caseasauria |
These tetrapods appeared during the Pennsylvanian and went extinct at the end of the Permian period. They were the dominant land animals for some 40 million years, and were almost wiped out by the P/Tr extinction event. A few survived until the lower Triassic to form the therapsids. The therapsids led to the mammals.
Because the term "Pelycosaur" does not include their descendants, it is not used much now.[1]
The most notable of these land animals was Dimetrodon, the top predator of its time.