Brachychirotherium

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Brachychirotherium
Temporal range: Middle Triassic-Early Jurassic
~247–190 Ma
Brachychirotherium sp. from the Redonda Formation of New Mexico (New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science)
Trace fossil classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Clade: Archosauria
Clade: Pseudosuchia
Ichnofamily: Chirotheriidae
Ichnogenus: Brachychirotherium
Beurlen, 1950
Ichnospecies

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Brachychirotherium is an ichnogenus, a form taxon based on footprints. It is a type of chirothere ('hand beast'), a term referring to the footprints of five-toed Triassic reptiles with a short fifth digit, leaving an appearance similar to a reverse human hand print. Brachychirotherium was first characterized from fossils found in Triassic beds in Germany,[1] but has since been found in France,[2] South Africa,[3] Argentina, Greenland,[4] Peru,[5] Bolivia,[6][7] and North America.[8]

Front (manus) and rear (pes) footprints are distinguishable, though manus prints are not always preserved. The pes prints show five toes, which are proportionally shorter and stubbier than those of other chirotheres. Digit III is the longest, followed by digits II and IV, though they are all of a similar length. Digit I is notably shorter, and the impression of digit V is reduced to an oval pad at the sole. The manus prints likewise show up to five short digits, with the pad of digit V separate from the rest. The surfaces of the sole and palm are broad, and creases are indistinct. The prints were likely produced by some form of large pseudosuchian (reptiles related to crocodilians), such as aetosaurs or quadrupedal rauisuchids.[9]

Species

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References

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