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The mixosaurid ichthyosaur Contectopalatus from the Middle Triassic of the German Basin
Authors:Michael W Maisch  REAS T MATZKE
Institution:Michael W. Maisch &Andreas T. Matzke [], Institut und Museum für Geologie und Paläontologie, Sigwartstr. 10, D-72076 Tübingen, Germany
Abstract:The skull of the mixosaurid species Contectopalatus atavus (Quenstedt, 1851-52) is the most bizarre of any known ichthyosaur. It possesses a very high sagittal crest formed by the nasal, frontal and parietal bones which grows higher during ontogeny. This skull structure - found to a lesser extent in the other mixosaurid genera Mixosaurus and Phalarodon - is a synapomorphy of the family Mixosauridae. It is here interpreted as correlated with a unique arrangement of the jaw adductor musculature among tetrapods, with the internal jaw adductors extending over most of the skull roof up to the external narial opening. This reconstruction would increase the biting force considerably and the hypothesis is supported by peculiarities of the dentition and jaws of Contectopalatus. Contectopalatus probably reached a length of about 5 meters. It is therefore the largest known mixosaurid and one of the largest Triassic ichthyosaurs. The general text-book picture of mixosaurs as small, rather unspecialized, primitive ichthyosaurs is incorrect. Mixosaurs were a highly specialized, uniquely adapted and very diverse ichthyosaur family, some members of which rank among the marine top predators of their time.
Keywords:Reptilia  Ichthyosauria  Mixosauridae  Contectopalatus  cranial anatomy  jaw musculature  size  palaeobiology
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