Royal Society Open Science (Oct 2023)

A new archosauriform species from the Panchet Formation of India and the diversification of Proterosuchidae after the end-Permian mass extinction

  • Martín D. Ezcurra,
  • Saswati Bandyopadhyay,
  • Dhurjati P. Sengupta,
  • Kasturi Sen,
  • Andrey G. Sennikov,
  • Roland B. Sookias,
  • Sterling J. Nesbitt,
  • Richard J. Butler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.230387
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 10

Abstract

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Proterosuchidae represents the oldest substantial diversification of Archosauromorpha and plays a key role in understanding the biotic recovery after the end-Permian mass extinction. Proterosuchidae was long treated as a wastebasket taxon, but recent revisions have reduced its taxonomic content to five valid species from the latest Permian of Russia and the earliest Triassic (Induan) of South Africa and China. In addition to these occurrences, several isolated proterosuchid bones have been reported from the Induan Panchet Formation of India for over 150 years. Following the re-study of historical specimens and newly collected material from this unit, we erect the new proterosuchid species Samsarasuchus pamelae, which is represented by most of the presacral vertebral column. We also describe cf. proterosuchid and proterosuchid cranial, girdle and limb bones that are not referred to Samsarasuchus pamelae. Phylogenetic analyses recovered Samsarasuchus pamelae within the new proterosuchid clade Chasmatosuchinae. The taxonomic diversity of Proterosuchidae is substantially expanded here, with at least 11 nominal species and several currently unnamed specimens, and a biogeographical range encompassing present-day South Africa, China, Russia, India, Brazil, Uruguay and Australia. This indicates a broader taxonomic, phylogenetic and biogeographic diversification of Proterosuchidae than previously thought in the aftermath of the end-Permian mass extinction.

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