Clade non classé
Valide Éteint

Halisauromorpha

Bell and Polcyn 2005

The Halisaurinae are a subfamily of mosasaurs, a group of Late Cretaceous marine lizards. They were small to medium-sized, ranging from just under 3 meters in Eonatator sternbergi to as much as 8 or 9 meters in Pluridens serpentis. They tended to have relatively slender jaws and small, numerous teeth, suggesting a diet of small fish and other prey. Although the skeleton is primitive compared to other Mosasauridae in many respects, halisaurines had the distinctive hypocercal tail of other mosasaurids suggesting good swimming ability, and they persisted alongside other mosasaurs until the end of the Cretaceous. The earliest known remains of halisaurines occur in rocks of Santonian age and the subfamily persists until the latest Maastrichtian. Halisaurines are known from North and South America, Europe, Asia and Africa, indicating a more or less global distribution in the Late Cretaceous. Four genera are currently recognized: Eonatator, Halisaurus, Phosphorosaurus and Pluridens.

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Plage temporelle
Occurrences PBDB
0
Groupe
Mosasaures
Carnivore aquatic Terrestre
Halisauromorpha
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Fossil of Halisaurus, an extinct reptile- Took the picture at Muse (Trento) © Ghedoghedo · CC BY-SA 3.0 · Wikimedia

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PBDB Wikipedia
Classification
Mosasauridae Famille
Halisauromorpha Clade non classé
Images 1
Bibliographie
Description originale
G. L. Bell and M. J. Polcyn. 2005. Dallasaurus turneri, a new primitive mosasauroid from the Middle Turonian of Texas and comments on the phylogeny of Mosasauridae (Squamata). Netherlands Journal of Geosciences 84(3):177-194 DOI ↗