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Santanachelys
Santanachelys
gaffneyi is the earliest known sea turtle. It is the only species in the genus
Santanachelys, which itself is a member of the extinct family Protostegidae. The species was first described
from a 20-centimeter long fossil
specimen unearthed in 1998 in Eastern Brazil. Due to the rock layer from which it was
excavated, it was determined that the specimen was from the Early Cretaceous
period some 110 million years old.
While the specimen
showed many characteristics of modern sea turtles, it differed from the typical
sea turtle body plan in several ways. One glaring difference is that
Santanachelys had distinguishable digits at the tip of its forearms.
Instead of the fully fused, hydrodynamic paddles that modern sea turtles
possess, the early sea turtle's digits were distinct and movable similar to that
of non-marine turtles.
Like later sea turtles though, Santanachelys had large salt glands situated near its
eyes which allowed it to drink saltwater without dehydration.
Evolutionarily, the morphology of
Santanachelys is typical of what is expected of an early sea turtle. The
front appendages not being fully evolved into flippers is a sign of this. The
presence of large foramen in the turtle's skull where salt glands were is an
interesting evolutionary point. It is pointed out that this suggests that the
evolutionary return to oceanic waters of the sea turtle line evolved before the
finalization and streamlining of the line's paddles.
Taxonomically,
Santanachelys has been placed in the family Protostegidae along with many other extinct sea turtles. It
is the earliest member of the family to date, and the earliest known member of
the sea turtle superfamily, Chelonioidea. Cladistically, it is the sister taxon to the rest of the later protostegids,
including Protostega and Notochelone. As a member of its family, its
closest living relative belongs to the family Dermochelyidae, the leatherback turtle.
Its genus,
Santanachelys was named for the Santana Formation, the locality where the
fossil was found and chelys, Greek for "turtle". The species name, S.
gaffneyi was named in honor of Eugene S. Gaffney, a paleontologist who specialized
in turtle phylogeny. Репродукции (1, 2):
  Ископаемые останки (1, 2, 3):   
Tags: Вымершие рептилии, Мел, анапсиды, бесщитковые, диапсиды, протостегиды, скрытношейные, черепахи
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