Raeticodactylidae

Family of eopterosaurs from the Late Triassic From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Raeticodactylidae is a family of eudimorphodontoid eopterosaurian pterosaurs that lived in Switzerland during the Late Triassic. The family includes Caviramus, and the type genus Raeticodactylus, which are both known from the Kössen Formation, around 205 mya. Raeticodactylidae was first used in 2014 by Andres et al., as a group of all pterosaurs closer to Raeticodactylus than Eudimorphodon. The following phylogenetic analysis follows the topology of Andres et al. (2014).[1]

Eopterosauria
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Reptilia
Order:Pterosauria
Clade:Eopterosauria
Quick facts Scientific classification, Genera ...
Raeticodactylids
Temporal range: Late Triassic, 205 Ma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Pterosauria
Clade: Eopterosauria
Superfamily: Eudimorphodontoidea
Family: Raeticodactylidae
Andres et al., 2014
Genera
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In 2020 however, a study upheld by Matthew G. Baron about early pterosaur interrelationships found no evidence to support the existence of the clade Eopterosauria (the clade of which raeticodactylids might also belong to) as an early diverging clade within the Pterosauria, therefore, he sunk both Caviramus and Raeticodactylus within a clade he called Caviramidae.[2]

References

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