Art Print with a life-like picture of a vanished saurian in its environment on 150 g/m² paper. Sizes and orientation: ISO/DIN A1 & A2 landscape.
incl. VAT plus Shipping Costs
Delivery time: 1-2 weeks
SKU: 905059 (A1), 905058 (A2)
PALAEOLOVE artwork and art wares are recognizable due to their scientifically accurate visualisation that is accompanied by sound, science-based information. Our products are designed in Switzerland and analogously & digitally handmade in Switzerland and other European countries under the guidance of experts, true to the motto: «Science meets Design»!
The abbreviation «MIO» (= million, after the German national standard DIN 5008) – occasionally found on our goods and product pages to indicate the geological age of fossil taxa – is equivalent to «MYA» (= million years ago).
A terrestrial predator from the Besano Formation (= Grenzbitumenzone, Middle Triassic) of Monte San Giorgio, Switzerland, that is amongst others characterized by a vertical ankle joint (LAUTENSCHLAGER & DESOJO 2011, NESBITT 2011).
With the description of the vertical ankle joint (= crocodiloid tarsus) in Ticinosuchus and Crocodylia by KREBS (1963, 1965, 1973, 1976) it was for the first time possible to establish a sister group relationship within the «Thecodontia» OWEN, 1859 («animals with rooted teeth»), the now obsolete former waste basket for early archosaurs. The discovery of the vertical ankle joint was the basis for the modern classification of the Archosauria («ruling reptiles»), namely the dichotomous subdivision of its crown-groups into Crurotarsi (= Crocodilotarsi) with a vertical ankle joint and Ornithodira (pterosaurs, dinosaurs and their relatives) with an advanced mesotarsal ankle joint.
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