Steppesaurus is an extinct genus of basal Eupelycosauria belonging to the Sphenacodontidae, related to Dimetrodon and Sphenacodon, from the Late Permian San Angelo Formation of Texas.

Steppesaurus
Temporal range: Late Permian, Wuchiapingian
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Synapsida
Family: Sphenacodontidae
Genus: Steppesaurus
Olson & Beerbower, 1953
Species:
S. gurleyi
Binomial name
Steppesaurus gurleyi
Olson & Beerbower, 1953
Outline of Steppesaurus maxilla with skull of Sphenacodon for comparison, showing that the latter had more teeth in a given stretch of upper jaw

Discovery and naming

edit

A maxilla and dentary, holotype FMNH UR 148, were at the Pease River found by Everett Claire Olson in 1950, who named the genus in 1953, together with James R. Beerbower, after J. Steppe who had assisted in the excavation.[1]

Description

edit

The body length of Steppesaurus has been estimated as high as eighteen feet, making it the largest known sphenacodontid,[2] but this failed to take into account that its teeth, as restored, were more widely spaced. It likely had less teeth in its maxilla, which as a whole was not particularly large.

Classification

edit

Olson in 1953 placed Steppesaurus in the Sphenacodontidae but in 1962 changed this to the Phthinosuchidae, making it a member of the Therapsida, as support for his hypothesis that these had been found in the Early Permian.[3] This has proven to be very controversial.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ E.C. Olson and J.R. Beerbower. 1953. "The San Angelo Formation, Permian of Texas, and its Vertebrates". Journal of Geology 61(5): 389-423
  2. ^ Edwin H. Colbert, 1965, The Age of Reptiles, Dover Publications, 2012 edition, p. 48
  3. ^ E.C. Olson. 1962. "Late Permian terrestrial vertebrates, U.S.A. and U.S.S.R." Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, New Series 52(2): 1-224


  NODES
Note 1