Euparkeria

Euparkeria
Temporal range:
SAM-PK-5867, the holotype skeleton of Euparkeria capensis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Archosauromorpha
Clade: Archosauriformes
Clade: Eucrocopoda
Family: Euparkeriidae
Genus: Euparkeria
Broom, 1913
Type species
Euparkeria capensis
Broom, 1913
Synonyms
  • Browniella africana Broom, 1913

Euparkeria (/jˌpɑːrkəˈrə/; meaning "Parker's good animal", named in honor of W. K. Parker) is an extinct genus of archosauriform reptile from the Triassic of South Africa. Euparkeria is close to the ancestry of Archosauria, the reptile group that includes crocodilians, pterosaurs, and dinosaurs (including birds).

Fossils of Euparkeria, including nearly complete skeletons, have been recovered from the Cynognathus Assemblage Zone (CAZ, also known as the Burgersdorp Formation), which hosts the oldest advanced archosauriforms in the fossil-rich Karoo Basin. Tentative dating schemes place the CAZ around the latest Early Triassic (late Olenekian stage) or earliest Middle Triassic (early Anisian stage), approximately 247 million years old.

Euparkeria is among the most heavily described and discussed non-archosaur archosauriforms. It was a small carnivorous reptile with a boxy skull, slender limbs, and two rows of tiny teardrop-shaped osteoderms (bony scutes) along its backbone. Euparkeria is a eucrocopod, meaning that it was among the reptiles most closely related to true crown group archosaurs, according to specializations of the ankle and hindlimbs. The hind limbs were slightly longer than its forelimbs, which has been taken as evidence that it may have been able to rear up on its hind legs as a facultative biped. This conception supplemented older studies which interpreted Euparkeria as a particularly close relative to fully bipedal early dinosaurs. Its normal movement was probably more quadrupedal, with limbs positioned in a semi-erect posture, analogous (but not identical) to a crocodilian high walk. Biomechanical analyses suggests that Euparkeria was incapable of even short periods of bipedal activity.


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