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WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST
AND PRESENT
THE UNIVERSITY OF ( HI(L\GO PRESS
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
Agrnta
THE CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
LONDON AND EDINBURGH
THE MARUZEN-KABUSHIKI-KAISHA
TOKYO, OSAKA, KYOTO
KARL W. HIERSEMANN
LEIFZIQ
THE BAKER & TAYLOR COMPANY
NEW YORK
WATER REPTILES
OF
THE PAST AND PRESENT
BY
Samuel Wendell Williston
Professor of Paleontology in the University of Chicago
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THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
Copyright 1914 by
The Univ'ersity of Chicago
All Rights Reserved
Published October 1914
Composed and Printed By
The University of Chitaifo Press
Chicagro, Illinois, U.S.A.
PREFACE
It was just forty years ago that the writer of these lines, then
an assistant of his beloved teacher, the late Professor B. F. Mudge,
dug from the chalk rocks of the Great Plains his first specimens of
water reptiles, mosasaurs and plesiosaurs. To the youthful col-
lector, whose first glimpse of ancient vertebrate life had been the
result of accident, these specimens opened up a new world and
diverted the course of his life. They were rudely collected, after
the way of those times, for modern methods were impracticable
with the rifle in one hand and the pick in the other. Nor was
much known in those days of these or other ancient creatures, for
the science of vertebrate paleontology was yet very young. There
were few students of fossil vertebrates — Leidy, Cope, and Marsh
were the only ones in the United States — and but few collectors,
of whom the writer alone survives.
Those broken and incomplete specimens, now preserved in the
museum of Yale University, will best explain why this little book
was written. The author offers it, so far as lies within him, as an
authoritative and accurate account of some of the creatures of
earlier ages which sought new opportunities by going down from
the land into the water. So far as possible he has endeavored to
make the text understandable, and, he hopes, of interest also, to the
non-scientific reader. He will not apologize for such scientific
terms as remain, since only by their use can precision be attained:
there are no common English equivalents for them. The reader
will And their explanations in the chapter on the skeleton of reptiles,
and especially in the illustrations.
The author has had the opportunity during recent years of
critically studying nearly all the reptiles described in the following
pages, but, if that were the only source of his information, the
accounts of many would have been meager. He has endeavored,
briefly at least, to mention the names of all those to whom we are
chiefly indebted for our knowledge, but in such a work as this it is
manifestly impracticable to give due credit to every one.
vi WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
To the friends who have been of assistance in various ways he
tenders his sincere thanks: to Professor E. Fraas for photographs
and the kind permission to reproduce some of his excellent illus-
trations; to Dr. Dreverman, of the Senckenberg Museum, for
several excellent photographs for reproduction or restoration; to
Dr. Hauff, of Holzmaden, for an excellent photograph of an
ichthyosaur; to Dr. H. F. Osborn, of the American Museum, for
permission to reproduce the spirited restoration of ichthyosaurs
drawn by Mr. Knight; to Professors Schuchert and Lull, and
Dr. VVieland, of Yale University; to Dr. Hay and Mr. Gilmore. of
the National Museum, to Mr. Barnum Brown and Dr. McGregor,
of the American Museum, and to Professor Merriam, of the
University of California, for photographs and other favors.
Samuel W. Williston
University of Chicago
July, 1914
%
CONTENTS
CHAPTER PACE
I. Introduction i
II. Classification of Reptiles 13
III. The Skeleton of Reptiles 19
IV. The Age of Reptiles 44
y. Adaptation of Land Reptiles to Life in the Water • 59«»
^ly Order Sauropterygia 73
Plesiosauria.
Nothosauria.
Vn. Order Anomodontia 102
Lystrosaurus.
MIL Order Ichthyosauria 107
IX. Order Proganosauria 126
Mesosaurus.
X. Order Protorosauria 132
Protorosaurus.
Pleurosaurus.
XL Order Squamata 138
Lizards.
Mosasaurs.
Snakes.
XII. Order Thalattosauria 171
XIII. Order Rhynchocephalia 176
Choristodera.
XIV. Order Parasuchia 184
Phytosauria.
XV. Order Crocodilia 194
Eusuchia.
Mesosuchia.
Thalattosuchia.
XVI. Order Chelonia 216
Side-necked Turtles.
Snapping Turtles.
Fresh-water or Marsh Tortoises.
Land Tortoises.
Sea-Turtles.
Ancient Sea-Turtles.
Leather-back Marine Turtles.
River Turtles.
vii
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION
In most persons the word reptile incites only feelings of disgust
and abhorrence; to many it means a serpent, a cold, ghding,
treacherous, and venomous creature shunning sunlight and always
ready to poison. Our repugnance to serpents is so much a part
of our instincts, or at least of our early education, that we are
prone to impute to all crawhng creatures those evil propensities
which in reahty only a very few possess. Were there no venomous
serpents — and there are but two other venomous reptiles known —
we should doubtless see much to admire in those animals now so
commonly despised; because a few dozen kinds, like the rattle-
snakes, copperheads, and cobras, protect themselves in ways not
unlike those used by man to protect himself, we unjustly abhor
the thousands of other kinds, most of which are not only innocent
of all offense toward man, but are often useful to him.
There are now living upon the earth more than four thousand
kinds or species of cold-blooded animals which we call reptiles, all
of which are easily distinguishable into four principal groups : the
serpents and lizards, the crocodiles, the turtles, and the tuatera.
Their habits and forms are very diverse, but they all possess in
common certain structural characters which sharply distinguish
them from all other Hving creatures. A reptile may be tersely
defined as a cold-blooded, backboned animal which breathes air
throughout life. And yet, it is not quite certain that this defini-
tion is strictly correct when appKed to all the reptiles of the past,
since it has been believed that certain extinct ones may have been
warm-blooded. By this definition, short as it is, we at once
exclude a large number of cold-blooded, air-breathing, backboned
animals which were formerly included by scientific men among the
true reptiles, and even yet are popularly often so included — the
amphibians or batrachians. These animals, now almost wholly
represented by the despised toads, frogs, and salamanders, were,
2 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
very long ago. among the rulers of the land, of great size and
extraordinary forms. But they have dwindled away, both in size
and in numbers, till only a comparatively few of their descendants
are left, none of them more than two or three feet in length, and
all of them sluggish in disposition and of inoffensive habits. While
we may speak of the ami)hil)ians as air-breathing, they are, with
few exceptions, water-breathers during the earlier part of their
existence. Some may pass their whole lives as water-breathers,
while a few begin to breathe air as soon as hatched from the egg;
but these are the marked exceptions.
In many respects the internal structure of the amphibians of
the present time is widely different from that of reptiles, though
there can be no doubt that the early amphibian ancestors of the
modern toads, frogs, and salamanders were also the ancestors of all
living and extinct reptiles, and it is a fact that the living amphib-
ians differ more from some of the ancient ones than those early
am])hibians did from their contemporary reptiles. Discoveries
in recent years have bridged over nearly all the essential differ-
ences between the two classes so completely that many forms can-
not be classified unless one has their nearly complete skeletons.
We know that some of the oldest amphibians, belonging to the
great division called Stegocephalia, were really water-breathers
during a part of their Hves, because distinct impressions of their
branchiae, or water-breathing organs, have been discovered in
the rocks with their skeletal remains, but we are not at all sure that
some of the more highly developed kinds were not air-breathers
from the time they left the egg; indeed, we rather suspect that
such was the case.
We are also now quite certain that, from some of the early
extinct reptiles — the immediate forbears probably of the great
dinosaurs — the class of birds arose, since the structural relation-
ships between birds and reptiles are almost as close as those between
reptiles and amphibians.
Huxley believed that the great class of mammals arose directly
from the amphibians, and there are some zoologists even yet who
think that he was right. But paleontologists are now quite sure
that they were evolved from a group of primitive reptiles, known
INTRODUCTION 3
chiefly from Africa, called the Theriodontia; quite sure because
nearly all the connecting links between the two classes have already
been discovered — to such an extent, indeed, that really nothing
distinctive of either class is left save the presence or absence of the
peculiar bone called the quadrate, the bone with which the lower
jaw articulates in birds and reptiles; and certain elemental parts
of the lower jaw itself. And even these bones, in certain mammal-
like reptiles, had become mere vestiges. Even the double condyle
of the mammal skull, with which the vertebrae articulate, so like
those of the amphibian skull that Huxley based his belief of the
amphibian origin of the mammals chiefly upon it, has now been
found in certain reptiles. Warm-bloodedness, one of the diagnostic
characters of birds and mammals, is not really very important,
since it must have arisen in these two classes independently, and
we may easily conceive that the earliest mammals were cold-
blooded or that the immediate ancestors of the mammals were
warm-blooded.
It is an interesting fact in the history of the vertebrates, as of
all other groups of animals and plants, that the chief divisions arose
early in geological history. Every known order of amphibians
and reptiles, unless it be that including the blind-worms, was
differentiated by the close of the Triassic period. The frogs are
now known from the Jurassic. The mammals and birds also quite
surely date their birth from the Triassic. And this early differ-
entiation of the chief groups is doubtless due to the fact that the
potentialities of diverse evolution are limited by specialization.
It is apparently a law that evolution is irreversible, that it never
goes from the special to the general, that an organism or an organ
once extinct or functionally lost never reappears. And it is also
a law in evolution that the parts in an organism tend toward
reduction in number, with the fewer parts greatly specialized in
function, just as the most perfect human machine is that which has
the fewest parts, and each part most highly adapted to the special
function it has to subserve. And these laws explain why it is that no
highly specialized organism can be ancestral to others differing widely
from it. The more radically distinct an organism is from its allies,
the earlier it must have branched off from the genealogical tree.
4 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
The many new discoveries of extinct forms so often intermedi-
ate, not only between the larger groups, but between many of the
lesser ones as well, are making the classification of the vertebrates
increasingly difficult. At one time it was sufficient to define a
reptile as a cold-blooded animal with a single occipital condyle,
that is, with a single articular surface between the skull and the
first vertebra of the neck; a mammal as a warm-blooded animal
Nnth two articular surfaces; but these definitions are no longer
strictly correct. Connecting hnks do not break down classifica-
tion, as one might think, but they do often spoil our fine systems
and compel our classifiers to take a wider view of nature than their
own narrow province affords.
We can never hope that most, or even the greater part, of all
the animals which have lived in the past will ever become known
to us, even imperfectly. Doubtless the species of the past geologi-
cal ages outnumbered many times, perhaps hundreds of times,
all. those now living, since many of these latter are merely the
remnants of far more varied and extensive faunas. At times the
conditions for the preserv^ation of the remains of animal Ufe have
been more favorable than at others, and, under such favorable
conditions, a fairly good glimpse is sometimes given us of the fauna
of some isolated epoch and locaHty in the earth's history. Those
animals which Kved in and about the water have been preserved
in greater numbers and more perfectly than the strictly land
animals, since fossils are due to the preserving action of water,
with few exceptions.. Of those animals which Hved upon the land
or in the air only the rarest of accidents carried the skeletons into
the lakes, seas, and oceans. And, even when they had been covered
by sediments at the bottoms of lakes and seas and hidden away
from adverse agencies, it has often happened that the great erosions
of later ages have carried away and destroyed the rocks in which
they were inclosed. The records of long intervals of time have
thus been lost in all parts of the world. That we are able to obtain
even an imperfectly continuous history is due to the fact that the
intervals thus lost are not everj-where contemporaneous, that the
missing records of one place may be filled out in part elsewhere.
But this substitution of records from a distance can never make
INTRODUCTION 5
the history complete. If, in human history, we had only the
records for one century in China, for another in England, and for
yet another in South America, how imperfect indeed would be our
knowledge of human progress. Animals and plants are never quite
alike in remote regions, and they never have been. The living
reptiles of North and South America are today almost entirely
different, and, were their fossil remains to be discovered a million
years hence, it would be very diflicult to decide that they had once
lived contemporaneously; difficult, though perhaps not impossible,
since some are so nearly aHke that their relationships or possible
identity would probably be established after long search. This
will serve to make clear how very difficult it is, for the most part,
to correlate exactly the geological formations in remote regions
of the earth, or even sometimes in adjacent regions where the fossils
are scanty, or the conditions under which the animals had lived
were very different.
There are long periods of time, millions of years at a stretch
perhaps, throughout which our knowledge amounts to little or
nothing concerning many land reptiles which we are sure must
have existed abundantly. No better example of our oftentimes
scanty knowledge can be cited than the following. Until within
the past fifteen years it was thought that true land lizards, of which
there are about eighteen hundred species now living, dated back
in their history no farther than about the close of the great Second-
ary Period, or the Age of Reptiles. But a single skull of a true
land Hzard has been discovered in the Triassic deposits of South
Africa, a skull of a form so nearly Hke that of the modern iguana
of America that its discoverer, Dr. Broom, has called it Paliguana.
The lizards must have been in existence, probably many thousand
species of them, during all the great interval of time between
the Middle Triassic and the close of the Cretaceous, since it
is a law which can have no exception, that a type of hfe once
extinct never reappears. The "ancient iguanas" of the Trias
must have been the forbears of many, if not all, of the lizards of
later times, though nothing is known of their descendants through
a period of time which can be measured only by milhons of
years.
6 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
However, notwithstanding these imperfections of our geological
records, we know very much more about extinct reptiles than we
do about living ones, so far at least as those parts capable of pres-
ervation in the rocks are concerned. Were our knowledge of
reptiles confined to the forms now living upon the earth it would
be relatively very incomplete since, aside from the lizards and
snakes, they are merel}' the remnants of what was once a mighty
class of vertebrates.
Not onh' do we learn from the remains preserved in the rocks
the precise shape and structure of the bones of the skeleton and
their precise articulations, but we are often able to determine not
a little regarding the forms which the living animals had by the
impressions made by the dead bodies in the soft sediment which
inclosed them before decomposition of the softer parts had ensued,
sediments which afterward sohdified into hard rock. But these
impressions are, with rare exceptions, only those of profiles or of
flattened membranes. The rounded bodies of life do not retain
their shape long enough for the sediment to harden; in most
cases the flesh has decomposed before being entirely covered by
sediment. Sometimes the integument and scales in a carbonized
condition are actually preserved, retaining some of the actual
structure of the organized material. The carbon pigment of the
skin has sometimes been preserved in patterns indicating the color-
markings in some of these ancient reptiles; and even the micro-
scopic structure has been detected in carbonized remains of organs.
Fossil stomach contents, the bony remains of unhatched young, as
well as the dehcate impressions of skin and membrane, all add to
our knowledge of the structure and habits of the animals which
lived so long ago. Many other things also may be learned, or at
least inferred, concerning the living animals and their habits from
the positions in which the skeletons are found, from the nature of
the rocks which inclose them, or from the character and abundance
of other fossils found with them. The frequent discovery of bones
which had been injured and mended during life, or the living ampu-
tation of members, often tell of the characteristics of the creatures.
So, too, the climatic conditions under which the animals lived may
often be inferred with tolerable certainty; the presence of '' stomach
INTRODUCTION 7
stones" reveals something of the food habits, and even of the struc-
ture of the aHmentary canal, etc.
All this information is gained slowly, often very slowly, and with
much labor and pains. Rarely or never is it the case that all
the information obtainable concerning any one kind of an extinct
animal is furnished by a single specimen. Skeletons are very sel-
dom, perhaps never, found quite complete, with all their parts in
their natural positions; and the nature of the matrix inclosing them
usually prevents a study of all parts of any specimen. If a newly
discovered fossil is widely dilTcrent from the corresponding parts
of any creature previously known, whether living or extinct, we
cannot infer very much from a few bones as to what the remainder
of the skeleton is like. Such inferences or guesses in the past have
often resulted in grievous error, and self-respecting paleontologists
are now very reluctant to speculate much concerning extinct
animals from fragments of a skeleton, no matter what those frag-
ments or bones may be; future discoveries are sure to reveal errors.
It is, therefore, only by the accumulation of much material, and
by the careful study and comparison of all known related animals,
that reHable conclusions can be reached. Often it requires scores
of specimens to determine the exact structure of a single kind of
animal, and, as the collection and preparation of fossil skeletons
are tedious and expensive, our knowledge sometimes increases
very slowly. In recent years, however, there have been many more
students of extinct backboned animals than formerly, and there
are now many museums and universities which spend annually
large sums of money in the collection and preparation of such fos-
sils. This greater activity of the last twenty years is bringing to
light many new and strange forms, as well as completing our
knowledge of those previously imperfectly known.
It is commonly, but erroneously, believed that the bones of
extinct animals are usually found in excavations made for the pur-
pose. It is true that not a few specimens of fossils have been
discovered in excavations made for other purposes, such as
railway cuttings, quarries, wells, etc., but if no others were found
our knowledge of the animals of the past would be very meager
indeed. Fossils are, for the most part, found by deHberate search
8
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
over the denuded rocks in which they occur. Methods of search
and collection will best be understood by the following description
of the noted fossil-bearing rocks of western Kansas.
About the middle of Cretaceous times, there extended from the
Gulf of Mexico on the south to or nearly to the Arctic Ocean on
the north a narrow inland ocean or sea, a few hundred miles in
width, covering what is now the western part of Kansas and the
eastern part of Colorado, and separating the North American
Fig. I. — A characteristic chalk exposure in western Kansas, a hundred acres or
more in extent.
continent into two distinct bodies of land. This ocean, because of
its location, bordered on both sides by low-lying lands — the Rocky
Mountains had not then been pushed up — doubtless was compara-
tively calm and placid, free from violent storms and high tides.
That the climate, in the region of Kansas at least, was warm or
even subtropical is fairly certain, since plants alhed to those now
living in w^arm, temperate, or subtropical regions were then living
much farther to the north; and since the animals which then
INTRODUCTION 9
lived in this sea were only such as would be expected in waters of
warm temperature. Its tributary rivers could have been neither
large nor swift-flowing, since the sediment at its bottom was free,
or nearly free, from in-brought material. This was at least the
case not very far from its shores. Its slowly falling sediment was
composed, almost exclusively, of microscopic shells of animals
and plants, foraminifera and coccoliths. The deposits thus made
are almost identical with those now forming in various parts of
the world in clear but not deep waters, away from the immediate
coasts of the continents, almost pure chalk. Animals dying in
this inland sea fell slowly to the bottom during or after decomposi-
tion of their softer parts, and the slowly increasing sediments
covered up and buried the preservable parts. The many preda-
ceous fishes and other scavengers with which the waters abounded
often tore the decomposing bodies apart, separating and displacing
the bones of the skeleton; and the currents of the shallow waters
washed others apart. Often the teeth of fishes and other carnivorous
animals are found imbedded in the bones, and many are the scars
and toothmarks observed in the fossil bones.
After the ocean had dried up and the bottom had been raised
far above the present level of the oceans, other deposits made in
lakes and by the winds covered deeply the consolidating sediments,
burying them for millions of years with all that they contained.
Long-continued erosion by winds and rains has again laid bare
many parts of the old ocean bottom, and has washed them out
into ravines and gullies. Many hundreds of square miles of this
chalk are now laid bare in western Kansas, upon which the growth
of vegetation has been prevented by the arid climate. Here and
there may now be discovered protruding from the sloping or pre-
cipitous surfaces of this exposed chalk bones or parts of bones of
the old animals buried so long ago in the soft sediment of the ancient
ocean bottom.
The sharp-eyed searcher after fossils detects these protruding,
often broken and weather-worn, petrified bones, which themselves
betray the presence often of other parts of their skeletons still
concealed in the chalky hillside. Fortunate is he if he has dis-
covered a specimen soon after it appeared at the surface, before
lo WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
the rains have washed away and destroyed most of the remains
that had been there preserved. Still more fortunate is he if all
or nearly all of the original skeleton has been preserved together
in its natural relations. After days, perhaps weeks, of labor, the
specimen is secured and shipped to the laboratory. Those parts
which have been washed out of the chalky rock before the dis-
covery of the specimen are always more or less injured and for the
most part lost, their fragments strewn down the hillside, for erosion
is always slow and many years may have elapsed since first the
specimen had appeared at the surface. More frequently, perhaps,
a few strokes of the pick and shovel disclose but one, two, or three
bones remaining in the rocks. The specimen, if large, or composed
of many bones, is carefully uncovered sufficiently to show its extent,
and then, so far as possible, removed in large blocks of the rock.
The bones themselves, notwithstanding their petrifaction, are
usually soft and easily broken, and their separate removal from the
matrix may require weeks or even months of labor, work which
cannot be done prudently in the field.
Of many specimens the rock matrix is so hard that the task of
removing it from the bones is slow and difficult, indeed well-nigh
impossible, for the bones are usually softer than their surrounding
matrix. On the other hand, the matrix may be so soft and friable
that it cannot be quarried out in blocks. In such cases the separate
divisions, as large as they can be excavated and safely handled,
are carefully covered with thick bandages of burlap and plaster-of-
paris, often strengthened with rods of iron or boards. The skeleton
of a single animal treated in this way may require weeks and even
months to collect, prepare, and mount in the museum.
From what has been said the reader will understand how it is
possible to make an approximately accurate picture of extinct
animals as they appeared in life — approximately accurate, never
absolutely so. The flesh and other soft parts of an animal are
never petrified, though it is a common belief that they may be.
Petrified men and women are still occasionally shown in cheap
museums, but they are always frauds. Many times has the writer
been called upon to express an opinion as to the nature of seme con-
cretion which the discoverer was sure was a petrified snake, turtle,
INTRODUCTION
II
or even some part of the human body, Ijecause of fancied resem-
blances in shape and size. Not too emphatically can it be said
that anything dug from the earth having the shape of a living ani-
mal and alleged to be petrified is either an accidental resemblance
or a deliberate humbug — if we except such extraordinary casts as
those of Pompeii. The Cardiff Giant and the Muldoon are still
fresh in the memory of some of us. There have been a few instances
where flesh has been preserved in the North, frozen for thousands
Fig. 2. — Removing a specimen of fish in a block from the chalk of western Kansas
of years, but frozen fossils are very different from petrified fossils.
Flesh decays before it possibly can be petrified, and only rarely
is the residue of flesh, tendons, and skin, that is, the carbon and
mineral matters, preserved.
One may sometimes restore extinct animals as in life, knowing
fully the shape and structure of the skeleton, and still be far from
the real truth. All elephants of the present time have a bare or
nearly bare skin. If all that we knew of the extinct mammoth
were derived from the skt-lcton we should never have suspected
I
12
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
that the creature was clothed during life with long and abundant
hair, such as has been found with the frozen bodies in Siberia.
Nor should we suspect that the dromedary and Bactrian camels of
today have large masses of fat on their backs, if we knew only their
skeletons. It must therefore be remembered that all restorations
of extinct animals, representing them as in life, are merely the sum
of our knowledge concerning them, as close approximations to the
real truth as it is possible to make. Or, rather, they should be
such approximations; unfortunately many such restorations have
been made by artists wholly unacquainted with the anatomy of the
creatures they attempt to represent, often adorned with appendages
drawn from a too vivid imagination.
CHAPTER II
CLASSIFICATION OF REPTILES
There is very much doubt, very much uncertainty, among
paleontologists about the classification of reptiles. No two writers
agree on the number of orders, or the rank of many forms. Some
recognize twenty or more orders, others but eight or nine. And
this doubt and uncertainty are due chiefly to the many discoveries
of early forms that have been made during the past twenty
years. The many strange and unclassifiable types which have
come to light in North America, South Africa, and Europe have
thrown doubt on all previous classificatory schemes, have weakened
our faith in all attempts to trace out the genealogies of the reptil-
ian orders; and classification is merely genealogy. It is only the
paleontologist who is competent to express opinions concerning the
larger principles of classification of organisms, and especially of
the classification of reptiles. The neozoologist, ignorant of extinct
forms, can only hazard guesses and conjectures as to the relation-
ships of the larger groups, for he has only the specialized or decadent
remnants of past faunas upon which to base his opinions. About
some things we can be quite confident; about some groups opin-
ions have crystallized, and we all agree, except perhaps on trifles.
The dinosaurs, the pterodactyls, the crocodiles, for instance, offer
only minor problems to perplex the systematist, but the origin
and the relations, not only of these, but also of nearly all the others,
are still involved in obscurity. The question, whence came the
ichthyosaurs, the plesiosaurs, the turtles, etc., seems almost as far
from solution as it did fifty years ago. With every problem solved
a dozen more intrude themselves upon us. Hence, classification
simply represents the present condition of our knowledge, our
present opinions as to genealogies. It was the fashion a dozen
years ago to draw all sorts of genealogical trees on the slightest
pretext, to trace in beautifully clear lines the precise descent of all
kinds of animals; and very few have been worth the paper on
13
14 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AXD PRESENT
which they were printed. When facts are numerous enough, con-
clusions arc patent even to the novice; when facts are few and
obscure, one can guess about as well as another. In general, it may
be said that the older a group of animals is the more abstruse are
the problems presented; first, because of the lack of abundant
material; second, because the forms speak to us in an unfamiliar
language that we cannot easily interpret. The classification of the
mammals approaches more nearly the ultimate truth than does that
of any other group of organisms, because we know more about the
extinct forms than we do of any other class, and also because we
know more about the living forms than we do about any other
living animals.
Species of reptiles are, for the most part, vague quantities in
paleontology; they can be determined with assurance only by the
comparison of abundant material. Adult characters in mammals
are apparent in the ossification of the skeleton, and size can be used
within moderate limits in the determination of species; but size
in reptiles means but little; no one could possibly say that the
skeleton of an alligator six feet in length is not that of an adult
animal if he knew nothing else about the Crocodilia. So also the
compression and malformations of bones from the processes of
fossilization obliterate specific characters in great part. Nor are
specific characters easily distinguishable in the skeletons of living
reptiles. The genus, therefore, among fossil reptiles is practically
the unit, and we may be sure that for every well-defined genus we
discover there existed numerous minor variations, which, had we
the Uving animals to study, we should call species. We classify
the living Crocodilia into two families, about four well-defined
genera — perhaps even five or six — and about twenty-five species.
Of the living lizards there are about eighteen hundred species,
twenty families, and four larger groups or suborders. In all
prol)abiIity the lizards have never been more abundant and more
varied than they are at the present time. Possibly these propor-
tions of species, genera, families, and suborders may represent
approximately the proportions that have existed at some time or
other in most of the other groups which we call orders — approxi-
mately only, for we can never be quite sure that we evaluate the
CLASSIFICATION OF REPTILES i
:>
structural characters of different gr()ui)s of organisms c|uite equally.
The absence of a molar tooth in a mammal would ordinarily indicate
a genus, the absence of a tooth in a reptile might not indicate even a
variety or a race. Whence it follows that classification of organ-
isms is not and never will be an exact science. The value of char-
acters used in classification is very unequal, as we have seen. No
two persons see these characters from the same viewpoints, and in
consequence no two persons whose opinions are worth while ever
wholly agree as to classification.
The following scheme differs only in minor details from the
more conservative of the generally accepted views, and those
differences are, for the most part, the writer's own opinions, to be
taken for what they are worth. It may be said decisively that
no classification of the reptiles into major groups, into super-
families or subclasses that has so far been proposed is worthy of
acceptance; there is no such subclass as the Diapsida or Synapsida,
for instance. And we have very much more to learn about the
early reptiles before any general classification of the reptiles can be
securely founded. It is very probable that the primary radiation of
the reptiles into the various lines of descent, into its main branches,
occurred much earlier than we have been disposed to believe; that
before the close of Paleozoic time, perhaps before the close of the
Carboniferous, all the great groups of reptiles had gone off from the
main stem, and that since then only smaller and smaller branches
have appeared. There have been no new orders of reptiles in all
probability since Triassic times, and perhaps none since Permian.
Taxonomists are often disposed to cut the Gordian knots of
relationships by raising the ranks of the animals they stud}- to
independent positions. More than thirty independent orders of
reptiles have been proposed by different students, and quite as
many of mammals and of birds; possibly after more forms have
been discovered there will be as many proposed for the amphibians.
Sometimes, indeed, it is better to make such independent groups
than to unite lesser ones on doubtful evidence. But the writer,
for one, believes that it is more worthy of the thoughtful scientific
student to seek for relationships than for differences. It is far
easier to destroy than to construct, to make new genera, families,
l6 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AXD PRESENT
and orders than to unite those already proposed. To raise every
proposed suborder of reptiles to an order, as has been proposed
by various writers, and the orders to subclasses, only leaves classi-
fication where it was; nothing has been added to taxonomy save
a lot of new names to perjilex and annoy the student.
In the following scheme of classification three groups provision-
ally called orders are prefixed by an asterisk.
CLASS REPTILIA
Order COTYLOSAURIA
Primilivc reptiles with notochordal vertebrae, imperforate temporal region,
persistent intercentra; two coracoids; plate-like pelvis, with all or most
of the amphibian skull elements; short legs and short neck; phalangeal
formula primarily 2, 3, 4, 5, 3(4).
Suborder Diadectosauria Permocarboniferous, North America.
Pantylosauria Permocarboniferous, North America.
Labidosauria Lower Permian, North America.
Pareiasauria Upper Permian, Europe, Africa.
Procolophonia Triassic, Europe, Africa.
Order CHELONIA
Temporal region imperforate. Head and limbs more or less retractile
within a box formed chiefly by the exoskeleton.
Suborder Pleurodira Triassic to recent.
Cryptodira Jurassic to recent.
Trionychoidea Cretaceous to recent.
Order THEROMORPHA
Primitive reptiles with notochordal vertebrae, perforate temporal region,
persistent intercentra; two coracoids; plate-like pelvis with median vacu-
ity; no free dermosupraoccipitals in skull; longer legs and neck; phalangeal
formula 2. 3, 4, 5, 3(4).
Suborder Pelycosauria (sens, lat.) Permocarboniferous, North America,
Europe.
Dromasauria Upper Permian, Africa.
Dinocephalia Middle and Upper Permian, Africa.
Order THERAPSIDA
Reptiles with a single temporal perforation on each side; vertebrae not
notochordal; intercentra not persistent; pelvis with vacuity; skull bones
reduced; teeth heterodont; phalangeal formula, 2, 3, 3, 3, 3.
Suborder Anomodontia Permo-Trias, Africa, North America.
Therocephalia Upper Permian, .\frica.
Theriodontia Trias, Africa.
CLASSIFICATION OF REPTILES 17
Order SAUROPTERYGIA
Aquatic reptiles with a single temporal vacuity; no supratemporal bone,
or quadratojugal; ribs single-headed, diapophysial ; coracoids large, meet-
ing in middle line, single; neck long, tail short.
Suborder Nothosauria Triassic, Europe.
Plesiosauria Triassic to close of Cretaceous, cosmopolitan.
♦Order PROGANOSAURIA
Primitive aquatic reptiles; single (? upper) temporal perforation; neck
elongate; nares posterior; vertebrae notochordal; intercentra persistent;
pelvis plate-like; phalangeal formula 2, 3, 4, 5, 4(6). Permocarboniferous,
Africa, South America.
Order ICHTHYOSAURIA
Reptiles with all aquatic adaptations; a single, upper temporal perfora-
tion; both supratemporal and squamosal present; a single coracoid.
Middle Triassic to Benton Cretaceous, cosmopolitan.
*Order PROTOROSAURIA
A single, upper temporal vacuity, quadrate fixed (neck vertebrae elongate) ;
bones hollow; cervical ribs single-headed, articulating with centrum;
pelvis plate-like. Permian, North America, Europe.
Order SQUAMATA
A single, upper temporal vacuity, or, secondarily none; quadrate loosely
articulated with cranium; teeth on palate; intercentra more or less per-
sistent; a single coracoid; ribs single-headed, central.
Suborder Lacertilia Trias to recent.
Mosasauria Upper Cretaceous, cosmopolitan.
Ophidia Upper Cretaceous to recent.
*Order THALATTOSAURIA
Aquatic reptiles; two (?) temporal vacuities; ribs single-headed, attached
to centrum; single coracoid; no intercentra. Trias, California.
Order RHYNCHOCEPHALIA
Two temporal vacuities on each side; palate with teeth; intercentra
persistent; a single coracoid; teeth acrodont; ribs articulating with
centrum and arch.
Suborder Rhynchosauria Triassic, Europe.
Sphenodontia Triassic to recent.
Choristodera Uppermost Cretaceous, lowermost Eocene,
North America, Europe.
l8 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
OnUr PARASUCHIA
Suba(|ualic rcplilcs, with two temporal vacuities; an anlorbital vacuity;
no false palate; pubis entering acetabulum; ribs double-headed, diapo-
~~f physial.
Su^Dorder Phytosauria Upper Trias, cosmopolitan.
Pelycosimia Trias. Africa.
Pseudosuchia Trias, Europe, North America.
Order CROCODILIA
Two teniiH)ral vacuities; teeth thecodont; a false palate; pubis excluded
from acetabulum; single coracoid; ribs double-headed, diapophysial;
subaquatic or aquatic.
Suborder Eusuchia Jurassic lo recent.
Thalattosuchia Upper Jurassic, Europe.
Order DINOSAURIA
Ambulatory reptiles, with two temporal vacuities; no false palate; pubis
entering acetabulum; ribs double-headed, diapophysial.
Suborder Theropoda Upper Trias to close of Cretaceous, cosmopolitan.
Orthopoda Close of Trias to close of Cretaceous, cosmopolitan.
Sauropoda Upper Jurassic, Lower Cretaceous, cosmopolitan.
Order PTEROSAURIA
Volant reptiles; fourth finger greatly elongated to support patagium;
neck vertebrae elongated; bones hollow; ribs double-headed, diapo-
physial; a single coracoid; no clavicles or interclavicle; two temporal
vacuities.
Suborder Pterodermata Jurassic, Europe.
Pterodactyloidea Upper Jurassic to Upper Cretaceous, Europe,
North America.
CHAPTER III
THE SKELETON OF REPTILES
The bony framework, or skeleton, that which gives form and
stature to the body, and which serves for the support of the soft
parts and the attachment of muscles, is, with rare exceptions, all
that is ever preserved of fossil animals. Because, therefore,
students of extinct animals must rely so much, if not exclusively,
upon the skeleton much attention has been given to the study of
comparative osteology, the science of bones. Not only are most
of the bones of the skeleton characteristic of the genus to which
they belong, but the more general plan of the skeleton, or parts
of the skeleton, is likewise characteristic of the larger groups. The
paleontologist may become so expert in deciphering the characters
of single bones, or even parts of bones — ^often all that are known
of animals new to science — that he is able to hazard guesses as to
the general structure of the skeleton to which they belong. But
such guesses usually will approximate the real truth only in the
degree that the bones upon w'hich they are based approximate
like bones of other animals that are better known. Not all parts
of the skeleton are equally characteristic of the t}q3e of animal which
possessed them. A tooth of a mammal may positively determine
the species to w^hich it belongs, while the toe bone of the same
animal might not enable one to guess at its family, even. As a
rule one can seldom be quite sure of the species of a reptile unless
the larger part of the skeleton, or at least the skull, is available,
although almost any bone of the skeleton, if one is expert, will
permit a decision as to the family, if not the genus.
One must often depend upon the positions and relations of the
bones, as found in the rocky matrix, for the final determination
of many characters. One can, for instance, never be sure of the
number of bones in the neck, trunk, tail, or feet of a reptile, until
specimens have been found with all such bones in position. It
is for this reason that much care is exercised in the collection of
19
20 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
specimens of fossil animals, and especially
of fossil reptiles, to preserve all parts of
the skeleton, so far as possible, in the
relations they occupied in the rocks until
they can be studied in the laboratory.
Many grievous errors have been made in
the past by hasty inferences from fragmen-
tary and poorly collected specimens.
Because of the reliance which must be
placed upon the skeleton it will be neces-
sary to speak somewhat in detail of its
structure in the reptiles, and to use not
a few terms in its description that are
unfamiliar to the general reader. So far as
possible technical terms will be avoided,
though some must be used, as there are
no equivalents in the English language
for them. The reader may use this
chapter as a sort of explanatory index
or glossary for the better elucidation of
the necessary details of the following
chapters.
It is needless to say that the skeleton of
a reptile is arranged on essentially the
same plan as that of our own; the bones
have the same names that they have in
our own skeleton, but there are more of
them, and the individual bones, as a
general rule, are less highly specialized,
that is, are not so well adapted for special
functions. In a word, the skeleton of a
reptile for the most part is generalized,
though particular parts may be highly
specialized for particular uses. As a rule,
if not as a law, the course of evolution
has been to reduce the number of parts
and to adapt those which remain more
rilE SKELETON OF REPTILES
21
closely to their special uses, either by increase in size, or by modili-
cations of their shape and structure.
SKULL AND TEETH
The skull of reptiles is much more primitive or generalized in
structure than is that of mammals, to such an extent, indeed, that
there is yet much doubt as to the precise homologies of some of the
bones composing it; and, inasmuch as the names were originally
given, for the most part, to the bones of the human skull, there is
still some confusion among students as to the proper names in
all cases, a confusion that doubt-
less will not be wholly dissipated
until we know much more about
the early or more primitive
reptiles than we do at present.
Fig. 4 Fig. s
Fig. 4. — Seymouria, a primitive cotylosaurian. Skull, from above: pm, pre-
maxilla; », nasal; /, lacrimal; p, prefrontal; /, frontal; pf, postfrontal; //, inter-
temporal; si, supratemporal; sq, squamosal; ds, dermosupraoccipital; /, tabulare;
_;", jugal; po, postorbital; m, maxilla; s, surangular; ang, angular; pa, parietal.
Fig. 5. — Seymouria, skull from the side. E.xplanations as in fig. 4.
As in other parts of the skeleton, there has been a reduction
in the number of parts of the reptile skull from that of the more
primitive forms, and a better adaptation of those which remain
for the special uses they subserve. This reduction in number has
been caused in part by the actual loss of bones, in part by the fusion
of contiguous ones. The most primitive reptiles had no less than
seventy-two separate bones in the skull;' the human skull has
' Paired maxillae, premaxillae, nasals, prefrontals, lacrimals, frontals, parietals.
dermosupruioccipitals, tabularia, supratemporals, intertemporals, squamosals, jugals,
quadratojugals, postorbitals, postfrontals, quadrates, exoccipitals, paroccipitals.
vomers, palatines, pterygoids, sphenomaxillae, stapes, transverse, alisphcnoids or
orbitosphenoids, epipterygoids, articulars, prearticulars, angulars, surangulars, coro-
noids, splenials, dcntarics, one supraoccipital, one basioccipital, one basisphcnoid.
one ethmoid.
22
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
but twenty-eight inclusive of the ear bones. There is but little
variation, either in the number or in the relations of bones, in the
mammalian skull. If one knows the human skull thoroughly he
can easily understand the structure of the skull of any mammal.
The same cannot be said of the skulls of reptiles; one would be
greatly puzzled in the comparison of the skulls of turtles and croco-
diles, if he knew nothing about other forms. And it is safe to
formulate another general law in evolution here: Characters which
have been longest inherited are
least liable to change. The earliest
reptiles had at least four pairs of
bones which have disappeared in
all later reptiles; and they had
some bones in pairs which have
fused in later reptiles, either with
their mates or with contiguous
bones. The crocodile has at least
two pairs of bones which have
disappeared in turtles. On the
other hand, the turtle has at least
one pair of free bones which have
been fused with adjacent bones in
the crocodiles, and one pair that
is fused which is free in the latter.
The lizard has one pair of bones
that has been wholly wanting in
other reptiles for milHons of years,
while on the other hand it has lost
some bones that are present in all other modern reptiles. The
four parts of the occipital bone of mammals, basioccipital, exoccipi-
tals, and supraoccipital, are almost invariably free and there is a
single occipital condyle, except in the Theriodontia.
In this reduction or fusion of parts, or in addition thereto, there
has been a general lightening-up of the whole skull-structure in
reptiles from the rather massive and protected form of the older
to the lighter, less protected, and more fragile type of the
later ones, since speed, greater agilit}-. better sense organs, and
Fig. 6. — Labidosaunis, a colylosaur.
Skull from above: pm, premaxilla; it,
nasal; m, maxilla; /, lacrimal; p, pre-
frontal; /r, frontal; />/, postfrontal;
po, postorbital; j, jup;al; pa, parietal;
sq, squamosal; ds, dcrmosupraoccipi-
tal; pj, parietal foramen.
THE SKELETON OF REPTILES
23
doubtless greater brain power have rendered unnecessary or useless
the older kinds, just as modern methods and modern arms have
rendered useless the coat of mail of the Middle Ages.
The old reptiles had a continuous covering or roof for the skull,
pierced only by the openings for the nostrils in front- the nares —
the orbits for the eyes near the middle, and a smaller median open-
ing back of them for the so-called "pineal eye." The temporal
region, that is, the region back of the orbits on each side, was
completely roofed over by bone for the supporf and protection of
the jaw muscles. In later reptiles this region has been lightened,
Fig. 7. — Edaphosaurus, a iheromorph reptile from the Permian of Texas. Skull
with single temporal vacuity.
either by holes that pierce it or by the emargination of its free
borders, as in the turtles. The openings have occurred in different
ways, and with the loss of different bones in various Hnes of descent.
In one large group of reptiles, comprising the pterodactyls, dino-
saurs, phytosaurs, crocodiles, and rhynchocephalians, there are
two openings on each side, called the supratemporal and lateral
temporal vacuities. In another still larger group there is a single
vacuity on each side, all members of which it has been thought were
markedly related to each other. Some of these, the lizards, snakes,
and mosasaurs, the ichthyosaurs, and probably the proganosaurs.
24
WATER REPTILES OF THE FAST A.\D PRESENT
have the single opening high up on the side, corresponding
apparently to the supratemporal vacuity of the double-arched
forms, as those with two openings are called. Many others, how-
ever, like the whole order Therapsida and the Theromorpha, have
the single opening lower down and bounded differently; their
relationships are doubtful, since it is very much of a question how
the single opening has arisen. There have been many theories
to account for the origin of the temporal vacuities, but all are yet
speculations. Notwithstanding these doubts, which more recent
discoveries have intensified, there can be none that the structure
Fig. 8. — Sphenodon (tuatera). Skull from side and above: pm, prema.xilla;
n, nasal; prf, prefrontal; /, frontal; pf, postfrontal; />, parietal; po, postorbital;
sq, squamosal; w;, maxilla; j, ju^al; qj. quadratojugal; q, quadrate; r, coronoid;
sa, surangular; art, articular; pa, prearticular; d, dcntary; an, angular.
of this region of the skull ofTers important and reliable characters
for the classification of the reptiles into the larger groups, but,
unfortunately, we are very uncertain yet as to what this classi-
fication should be. We are confident that all those reptiles having
two temporal vacuities on each side are related to each other; we
are yet very much in doubt as to the classification of all other
re])tiles, or at least all others having only a single temporal vacuity
on each side.
Better evidences of relationships, or the absence of relation-
ships, are ofTered by the presence of certain bones in the skulls
in some orders that are lost in others, since it may be accepted as
THE SKELETOy OF REPTILES 25
an axiom that new bones have not appeared in the skulls of reptiles,
birds, or mammals; and that no l)()ne which has once disaj)i)eared
has ever been functionally regained 1)\' the descendants of those
that lost it. The presence, then, of an extra bone in the temporal
region of the lizards or the ichthyosaurs is proof that they have had
a long and independent descent from reptiles which possessed it.
The mandible of the earliest reptiles was composed of not less
than seven separate and distinct bones, as shown in the accom-
panying figures. The mandible of no modern reptile has more
than six, and some have fewer. The mandible of mammals is
composed of a single bone, the dentary; those reptiles, the Therio-
dontia, which doubtless were ancestral to the mammals in Triassic
times, have all the bones, except the dentary, much reduced, or
even vestigial. The prearticular bone, as shown, so far as known,
has been absent in all reptiles since Triassic times, except the
ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs, Sphenodon, and turtles, all reptiles of
ancient origin. The coronoid bone primitively extended the whole
length of the teeth on the inner side; in all reptiles, except the
plesiosaurs, since Triassic times it is either reduced to a small bone
back of the teeth or is absent. So also the splenial has been greatly
reduced in size in all later reptiles and may be wanting as in
Sphenodon and modern turtles. The articular of reptiles, it is now
generally believed, is represented in mammals by one of the ear
bones, the quadrate by another.
The teeth of reptiles are of much less importance, as a rule, in
the determination of relationships than are the teeth of mammals.
Rarely arethejl^hapes of specific, and_often not of generic, impor-
tance, though their number and relative sizes may~Be! The teeth
of mammals, as a rule, are forty-four or less in number, and they
are always inserted in distinct sockets in the jaw bones. Among
reptiles they are indefinite in number, and may be attached to
any of the bones of the palate and sometimes also to the coronoid
of the mandibles. Furthermore, except in those reptiles related
to the immediate ancestors of the mammals, they are alike or
nearly alike in the jaws, that is, homodont, not distinguishable
into incisors, canines, and molars. They may be inserted in
separate sockets (thecodont), in grooves, or simply be co-ossified
26
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
Fig. q. — Mandible of Triwcrorluichis, a stcgoccphalian ami)hibian, ancestrally
related to the reptiles: .1 from within; B from without. The coronoid is composed
of three bones, the true coronoid {cor), the intercoronoid {icor), and the precoronoid
ipc). The splenial is composed of two, the true splenial {sp) and the postsplenial
ipsp). The prearticular {pa) is broad, the dentary {d) is small; and the angular {an)
is only slightly visible on the inner side.
Fk;. lo. — MandibleofZ,a6/
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UATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
is not needed. The arrangement of the dentine in primitive reptiles
is complicated, that is, plicated or folded in labyrinthine figures,
like that of many stegoccphalian amjihibians, the Labyrinthodontia,
especiall\-. This labyrinthine structure of the dentine persisted
longest in the ichthyosaurs.
VERTEBRAE AND RIBS
The spinal column or backbone of reptiles, as in all air-breathing
vertebrates, is made up of a variable number of separate segments
called vertebrae, permitting flexibihty. Each vertebra is com-
posed of a body, or centrum, and an arch on the dorsal side for
the protection of the spinal cord. Various projections from the
vertebra, called processes, serve for the attachment of ligaments
Fig. 12.— Procoelous vertebra of snake: :u. zygantrum; :5, zygosphene; />:, pos-
terior zygapophysis.
or muscles, for articular union with adjacent vertebrae, or for the
support of ribs, and these processes have characteristic differences
in different reptiles. The pair in front and behind, forjirticulation
with the adjoining vertebiae, may become obsolete or even lost in
swimming reptiles, as we shall see; they are called /.y^ai).)ph.\>cs.
In not ;i k\v reptiles there is an additional pair for zygapophysial
articulation in front and behind, called zygosphene and zygantrum,
for the greater strengthening of the column; they are especially
characteristic of snakes and certain lizards. In certain other
reptiles, especially the long-necked dinosaurs, there is an addi-
tional pair arranged differently from the zygophene, that have
received the names hyposphene and h>pantrum.
On the top of the arch is the spine or spinous process, which
mav varv enormously in size and length; sometimes it is flattened
THE SKELETON OF REPTILES
29
or dilated above for the support of an exoskeleton, or it may be
heavy and massive for the attachment of strong muscles and Hga-
ments. In the modern basilisk lizards and in the ancient Dime-
trodon and Edaphosaiirus from the Permian rocks of Texas these
spines are of enormous length, some of them nearly four feet long in
reptiles not twice that length. Slender crawhng reptiles usually
have no spines, or only vestigial ones. On the sides of the arch
there may be a distinct transverse process for the articulation of
the rib.
In all early reptiles the ends of the body or centrum are concave,
as they are in nearly all fishes. Such a conformation, called amphi-
coelous, gives great flexibility to the spinal column, but only
moderate strength, since the intervening spaces are filled with
cartilage in life. In all living reptiles, with few exceptions, the
body is concave, Hke a saucer, in front and correspondingly convex
behind, ~an3~tlTe intervening cartilage has largel\- disappeared.
Such a mode of union, called procoelous, adds greatly to the strength
of the backbone, enabling it to receive greater shocks or greater
pressure without dislocation; or to sustain the greater strain of
muscles used in running swiftly or in climbing. Among living
reptiles, only the gecko lizards and the tuatera have biconcave
vertebrae. Some extinct reptiles, such as some of the dinosaurs,
animals that walked erect upon their legs, had their vertebrae
convex in front and concave behind ((jpisthocoelous) . Birds,
though walking erect, have a very difi'erent and more complicated
articulation of the cervical vertebrae, and certain reptiles, like the
turtles, have very complicated cervical vertebrae.
In the embryos of all vertebrate animals there appears first
an elongated fibrous rod, called the notochord, in the place of the
future spinal column. This rod may persist through life, never
ossifying, as was the case with all the earliest fishes, and is the
condition in some living ones. As the embryo grows, however,
the sejparate segments, or vertebrae, ossif}- about this rod in all
reptiles, forming bony rings, perforate at first in the middle for
the more or less constricted notochord. This stage was the
pefrnanent condition in all the earliest reptiles and in some later
ones. Such animals are said to have notochordal vertebrae, the
30
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AXD PRESENT
notochord more or less continuous, like a string of beads, the beads
representing the enlargements between the contiguous vertebrae.
In many early amphibians, and probably in all the earliest ones,
as well as in the fishes from which they were derived, the vertebra
is more complicated in that it is composed of at least three pairs
of^eparate bones, two of which united with each other, the third
finally disappearing in modern animals, or at thejmosjt represented
by a mere vestige called the intercentrum. The dorsal pair of
these bones, called the ncurocentra, forms the arch of the vertebra.
The ventral posterior pair, called the pleurocentra, increases in
Fig. 13.— Notochordal cervical vertebrae, with intercentra, of Opiiiacodoii, a
primitive thcromorph reptile from the Permocarbonifcrous of New Mexico: pa. pro-
atlas; AH, arch of atlas; 0, odontoid; u.v, axis.
size and unites to form the centrum or body of the vertebra; while
the ventral anterior pair, early united with each other, is called the
hypocentrum or intercentrum, persistent in all early reptiles as
a vestige between the centra on the ventral side. This divided
condition of the vertebra is persistent in the first_vertebra, the
atlas of all higher animals, in which the so-called body is the
hypocentrum or intercentrum, the arch is the neurocentrum,
while the pleurocentra have fused more or less with the anterior
part of the next vertebra, the axis, to form the so-called odontoid.
That this is the real explanation of the structure of the atlas
THE SKELETON OF REPTILES
31
is proved by the various stages of its evolution in the rci)tiles,
from the earliest (Fig. 15) in which it scarcel>- differs from
rhachitomous — as this structure is called — vertebrae of an early
amphibian, to the modern in which the structure is nearly like
that of mammals.
In front of the atlas, that is, between it and the skull, there
was, in all early reptiles, as well as in some later ones, like the
crocodiles and tuatera, the remnant of
what is believed to have been another
vertebra, of which only the arch re-
mains, and which is called the proatlas.
In its earliest condition it articulated
with the skull in front and the arch of
the atlas behind.
As in mammals, the vertebrae of the
different regions have received distinc-
tive names, cervical,- dorsal, lumbar,
sacral, and caudal. The numbers of
each region are far more variable than
they are among mammals, the total
number of vertebrae in the column
varying from about thirty to more than
five hundred, in certain snakes. Nor
are the different regions always easily
distinguishable, especially those in front
of the sacrum. In the earliest reptiles
there was practically no neck, and only
two vertebrae, the atlas and axis, that
properly can be called cervical. Very
soon, however, the reptiles developed a
longer neck with seven vertebrae, a
number that has remained singularly constant in higher animals,
especially in the mammals. In most modern reptiles there are
from seven to nine; in a few lizards, five. But the number was
much more inconstant among the older reptiles; some of the
plesiosaurs had as many as seventy-six cervical vertebrae; some of
the older lizards even had as many as eighteen.
Fig. 14. — Rhachitomous
dorsal vertebra of Eryops: 11,
neurocentrum or arch; pi,
pleurocentrum; /, inter-
centrum or hj-pocentrum; az,
anterior zygapophysis; pz. pos-
terior zygapophysis; d, diapo-
physis, for tubercle of rib; p,
parapophysis, for head of rib.
32
UATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
Ordinarily the cervical vertebrae differ from those behind them
only in the small size or fusion of their ribs; sometimes, however,
as in the Protorosauria and Pterosauria, the vertebrae may be much
elongated. The doj;sa) vertebrae of reptiles vary in number from
ten in turtles and some dinosaurs to forty-three in Pleurosatirus;
and under the name dorsal we
include the so-called lumbar, as
there is seldom any real distinction
between the two series, save the
smaller size or the co-ossification
of the ribs of the latter.
The sacrum in reptiles primi-
tively consisted of a single verte-
bra, which bore a large rib on each
side for the support of the pelvis.
Very early, however, a second or
even a third vertebra was added
to it from behind. The number
two is the rule among reptiles,
both ancient and modern; among
crawling reptiles the number never
exceeds three, but among ambulatory and flying reptiles the num-
ber may be as great as in any mammal.
The number of caudal vertebrae in reptiles is exceedingly
variable, from a dozen or fifteen up to a hundred and fifty or more.
In snakes but two regions are
distinguishable, the caudal
and precaudal, and the num-
ber altogether may reach
nearly five hundred. With
the exception of the first
few basal caudal vertebrae
(pygals) and the minute ones
at the extreme tip, all caudal vertebrae of reptiles bear a slender,
usually Y-shaped bone below in the interval between the centra, for
the protection of the vessels and nerves. Because of their shape
they have been called chevrons, and are really outgrowths from the
intercentra.
Fig. 15. — Ophiacodou, a primitive
theromorph reptile: proatlas, atlas,
and a.xis, with ribs.
Fig. 16. — Sacrum of Chclonc
THE SKELETON OF REPTILES
33
The ribs of reptiles are of more importance in classification than
one would suppose. The primitive rib was a slender, curved bone,
with the vertebral end dilated to articulate continuously with the
intercentral space — that between the centra and the anterior
part of the arch. And this is the condition still remaininji; in the
tuatera. Very soon, however, the lower end of the articular
surface (capitulum) became separated from the upper (tubercle)
by a notch, and the ribs became distinctly double-headed. And
this mode of articulation is the rule among mammals. Among
later reptiles, however, there were many modifications. In nearly
all the head migrated a little backward on the centrum. By the
loss of the tubercle in lizards, the head became truly single-headed,
and attached solely to the body;
and this condition is character-
istic of the order Squamata. In
another large group the head of
the rib gradually migrated up on
the arch and on the transverse
process (diapophysis) , so that
both head and tubercle are
attached to the diapophysis;
and this condition is equally
characteristic of the orders of
reptiles known collectively as
the Archosauria — the crocodiles,
pterodactyls, dinosaurs, and phytosaurs. In the Sauropterygia, the
ribs are single-headed and attached to the end of the diapophy-
sis. Finally in most ichthyosaurs the capitulum and tubercle
both articulate with the body of the vertebra.
Ribs primitively were probably attached to all the vertebrae
to the end of the tail. In the earliest reptiles that we know they
are present on all vertebrae as far back as the tenth or twelfth
caudal only, those of the caudal for the most part co-ossified
with the centra. The ribs of the neck vertebrae more quickly
disappeared, or became fused with the vertebrae, and only in the
crocodiles among Hving reptiles are there ribs on the atlas. The
sacral ribs, on the other hand, became much larger and stouter and
Fig. 17. — Oslodolepis , a primitive
theromorph reptile. Vertebrae from in
front and side, with primitive double-
headed rib and intercentrum.
34 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRJLSENT
developed an articulation at their outer ends for the support of the
ilium (Fig. i6).
The so-called ventral ribs are slender ossifications in the con-
nective tissue under the skin, on the under side of the body, and
are characteristic of most reptiles. The anterior ones doubt-
less fused together more or less to form the sternum -or breast
bone, which was otherwise absent in the early reptiles.
PECTORAL OR SHOULDER GIRDLE
Those bones which form the framework for the support of the
anterior extremity in vertebrate animals are known collectively
as the pectoral girdle. In our own skeleton there are but two on
each side, or four in all, the scapula or shoulder-blade, and the
clavicle or collar-bone. A third bone, however, is represented
in all mammals by a mere vestige which early unites with the
scapula and is called the coracoid process. In the lowest forms
of mammals, the Monotremata, of which the Oniilhorhynchus and
Echidna are the only examples, not only is this coracoid bone
largely developed, articulating w^ith the sternum or breast bone,
but there is an additional coracoid bone in front of this; and
there is also an interclavicle. Indeed, the pectoral girdle in
these mammals is more primitive or generalized in structure
than it is in any living reptiles, composed of scapula, coracoid,
metacoracoid, and clavicle on each side and an interclavicle
in the middle. No living reptiles have the metacoracoid, and,
as is the case with many mammals, some reptiles have no
clavicles.
Primitively, that is, in all the old reptiles, the girdle is composed
of scapula, coracoid, metacoracoid, clavicles, and interclavicle,
while in some of the very oldest there is yet another bone, more or
less of a vestige, derived from the ancestral amphibians and called
the cleithrum or supraclavicle. The scapula is more or less
elongated in crawling and climbing reptiles; more slender and
bird-like in those which walked erect after the manner of birds and
mammals; shorter and more fan-shaped in the swimming reptiles,
as we shall see. In some pterodactyls, unlike all other known
animals, the scapula articulated at its upper end with the backbone,
giving a much firmer support for the anterior extremities. Only
THE SKELETON OF REPTILES
o:>
in those reptiles allied
to the ancestors of the
mammals has the
scapula ever had a
spine or projection on
its dorsal side.
Of the two coracoid
bones in the original
pectoral girdle the
posterior one began
to disappear early and
is entirely lost in all
reptiles that lived later
than Triassic times,
though it still persists
in the lowest mam-
mals, as we have seen.
In most later reptiles
the remaining coracoid
has become less firmly
attached to the scapula
than it was in the older
reptiles. It usually
has a small foramen
piercing it near the
middle of the upper
border or end, the
supracoracoid fora-
men. The clavicle,
while more constant
among reptiles than
among mammals, has
been lost in some, the
Crocodilia, for in-
stance, as also the
dinosaurs and ptero-
dactyls. The inter-
clavicle is more
E
2
c
ri
o
•s
'%
e/T
V
>
G
•c
a
V
43
.a
u
C
C
a
u
o
fc£>
V
■(->
«, pubis; //.ilium; is,
ischium.
THE SKELETON OF REPTILES 4 i
erect-walking reptiles ancestral to the mammals, this proces? was
directed forward, as in birds and mammals. The crocodilia.
unlike all other known reptiles, have the pubes excluded from the
acetabulum, and they do not meet in a median symphysis. This
character alone will distinguish any crocodilian from all other
reptiles. But there is some doubt as to the homology of the bones
usually called pubes in the crocodiles. Some of the bipedal
dinosaurs have the pubis forked, the anterior part directed down-
ward and forward, and not meeting its mate in a symphysis, the
posterior process long and slender, lying below the long ischium,
as in birds. Indeed, when this peculiarity of the dinosaurian
pubis was first discovered, it was thought to be an evidence of the
immediate relationship of birds; its structure is now interpreted
differently.
POSTERIOR EXTREMITY
The thigh bone or femur in reptiles, like the humerus, is variable
in size and shape. Only in those reptiles that walked erect is the
articulation of the head set ofif from the shaft of the bone by a
distinct neck. In others the articulation is at the extreme top of
the bone, since the thigh bones are habitually turned more or less
directly outward from the acetabulum and the long axis of the body.
The more or less pronounced rugosities at the upper end of the
femur, for the attachment of muscles, called trochanters, are not
easily distinguishable into the greater and lesser, as in mammals.
Sometimes, as in the erect-walking dinosaurs, there is a more or
less pronounced process on the shaft lower down, called the fourth
trochanter, for the attachment of caudal muscles. On the back
part of the shaft there is a ridge or line for the attachment of
muscles, corresponding to the linea aspera of the mammalian femur.
The projections at the lower end on the sides are called condyles.
The two bones of the leg, or shin, are usually shorter than the
thigh bones, though in running and leaping animals they may be
quite as long or even longer. That on the inner or big-toe side is
called the tibia, and articulates with the distal end of the femur,
but chiefly with its inner condyle. It has a more or less well-
developed crest in front above for the attachment of the extensor
muscles directly, since there never is a patella in reptiles, and only
42
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
rarely sesamoid bones of any kind. The fibula, at the little-toe side
of the leg, is usually more slender than the tibia, though it may be
larger in swimming reptiles and even in some running forms. It
disappeared in some of the later pterodactyls. Its upper articula-
tion has a more gliding and somewhat rotary motion on the
outer condyle of the femur,
turning the foot outward
in extension of the leg.
The tarsus of reptiles
differs from that of mam-
mals, in that the chief
movements of extension
and flexion of the foot
upon the leg occur within
the tarsus rather than
between the tarsus and
leg bones. Primitively the
tarsus of reptiles consisted
of nine bones, two in the
first row, two in the second, and five in
the third, but in all modern reptiles the
bones of the middle row and the fifth one
in the third row have disappeared; in some
lizards and turtles the two of the first row
are fused. The two bones of the proximal
row correspond quite to the astragalus and
calcancum, the astragalus articulating with
both tibia and fibula proximally, the calcancum with the latter
only. The eldest known tarsus of any vertebrated animal, one
from the Coal Measures of Ohio, has this structure, while in all
the early amphibians there were three bones, the tibiale, inter-
medium, and fibulare. Some of the later swimming reptiles, like
the ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs, have apparently this amphibian
structure, with three bones that are usually called tibiale, inter-
medium, and fibulare, but it is very doubtful indeed whether
they are homologically the same. In the middle row two centralia
are known in one or two very ancient reptiles, but for the most
Fig. 23. — Right hind
foot of Ophiacodon: u.
astragalus; c, calcancum;
CI, C2, centralia; i, 2, 3,
4, 5, tarsalia.
THE SKELETON OF REPTILES 43
part there is only a single centrale, and even that is usually
lost in later reptiles. The third row. like the third row of the
carpus, had a distinct bone for each digit originally, but the fifth
one was very soon lost and has never reappeared. The structure
of the digits and number of bones are quite like those of the hands,
except that the fifth toe has four bones instead of three, that is,
the phalangeal formula was 2, 3, 4, 5, 4. As a rule in terrestrial
reptiles, as in terrestrial mammals, the hind foot is more specialized
than the front ones.
Most reptiles have an external covering or exoskeleton of horn\-
plates or scales or bony scutes. Homy scales are of course not
preservable as petrifactions, though in many instances their
actual carbonized remains or their impressions have been detected.
Such information comes only rarely, though doubtless in the
course of time we shall obtain it for most extinct reptiles. In the
mosasaurs, for instance, very perfect impressions showing the
detailed structure of the scales have been frequently found. Similar
impressions were long since observed by Lortet in Plcurosaurus,
and in not a few dinosaurs impressions of most wonderful perfec-
tion have been found. It is only in the water reptiles, probably,
that all externa] coverings tended to disappear.
Bony dermal plates or scutes are less common among reptiles,
though by no means rare. The turtles, as is well known, are
almost completely inclosed in such an exoskeleton. bones which
have coalesced more or less to form a box or carapace within
which the head and limbs may be withdrawn for protection.
In the modern crocodilians also the body is more or less protected
by small bone plates forming rows on the back and sometimes
on the under side. The ancient phytosaurs had similar plates.
Not a few of the dinosaurs were more or less covered with bony
scutes and sometimes with large bony plates or spines. Some
modern lizards have bony plates over the body instead of horny
scales.
CHAPTER IV
THE AGE OF REPTILES
Geologists divide the history of the earth, since life first appeared
upon it, into four general eras, the Proterozoic, Paleozoic, Mesozoic,
and Cenozoic, that is, into eras of first life, ancient life, middle
life, and recent life. These divisions were made long ago by geolo-
gists when it was believed that extraordinary changes, great cata-
clysmic revolutions, marked their limits.
With a fuller knowledge of the life of the past we know that
evolution has been continuous and uninterrupted; possibly acceler-
ated or retarded at times, but without break. Were the earth's
history to be written anew, with our present knowledge, and with an
unbiased mind, it is very doubtful whether many of the time
divisions would have the same limits that they have now — whether
the Paleozoic would terminate with the Carboniferous, or the
Permian, or the Trias, or whether indeed we should think it neces-
sary to make any primary divisions whatsoever. In other words,
our greater knowledge of living and extinct organisms, and of the
rocks which contain fossils, has made the problems of classification
much more complex than they seemed to be formerly. It is much
easier to classify organisms or rocks, or anything else, when we
know only a few isolated kinds — much easier to draw divisional
lines. Geological history is like a A'olume in which pages, leaves,
and even whole chapters either are missing or are printed in lan-
guages which we understand only imperfectly. Where the lost or
unknown parts belong, the largest divisions may be made, and
possibly such may have been epochs of unusual activity, of dias-
trophic changes which greath' accelerated organic evolution. Xo
one can say just where the dividing line should be drawn between
the rocks of Paleozoic and Mesozoic age, or between the ]Mesozoic
and Cenozoic, for there is none; the most that we can hope for is to
make the divisions everywhere in the world conform to those first
made for local reasons.
44
rilE AGE OF REPTILES
45
ri
o
E
u
c
c
ni
Pi
46 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
The periods of the Paleozoic era are the Cambrian. Ordovician.
Silurian, Devonian, Carboniferous, and Permian, in the order as
given; those of the Mesozoic era are the Triassic, Jurassic, and
Cretaceous; those of the Cenozoic era, the Eocene, Oligocene,
Miocene, Pliocene, Pleistocene, and Recent. As a relic of an old
classification we still often divide the Cenozoic into two quite
arbitrary divisions, the Tertiary and the Quaternary, the latter
including the Pleistocene and Recent only. The same may be
said regarding the limits of each of these periods as of the eras;
the sole problem is to make each period contemporaneous through-
out the world, an exceedingly difficult problem, because no faunas
or floras have ever been the same over the whole earth. Indeed,
with the exception of some of the lowliest and most generalized
forms, or man himself, no species are the same throughout the
earth today. Inasmuch as we must depend upon the fossils in the
rocks for the determination of the ages, where none is quite the
same in strata of remote localities the identification becomes very
difficult or even impossible. Nor are the periods, as accepted,
of equal or even approximately equal duration; the Cretaceous
period, for instance, was longer than all the remainder of the
Mesozoic, longer perhaps than all the time which has elapsed since
its close.
The earliest animals with a backbone, or rather the earliest that
we call vertebrates— for some vertebrates have no vertebrae —
began their existence, so far as we know, in late Ordovician times,
as attested Ijy fish bones in Ordovician rocks of Colorado and Utah.
The first evidences of the existence of air-breathing vertebrates
in geological history are footprints preserved in the uppermost
Devonian rocks of Pennsylvania. We call them amphibian because
they resemble footprints associated with amphibian skeletons in
later formations, and because the foot itself is still the most impor-
tant dift"erence we know between fishes and the higher animals.
In the rocks of the next great time division, the Mississippian, as
we call it in America, corresponding more or less closely with the
Lower or Subcarbonifcrous of other parts of the world, numerous
footprints of amphibians have been discovered, but no fossil
remains except a few from near its close in Scotland. From the
THE AGE OF REPTILES
47
48
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
Upper Carboniferous, or Pennsylvanian, however, not only numer-
ous footprints but the actual skeletons, or impressions of skeletons,
have long been known in Europe and America. Until recently
all these footprints and skeletons were supposed to be exclusively
amphi])ian. We are now almost sure that some of them belonged
to reptiles of lowly type, the earliest coming from near the middle
of the Pennsylvanian of Linton, Ohio. The amphibians of this
period were, for the most part, salamander-like creatures of from a
few inches to two or three feet in length. They all belong to the
group collectively known as the Stegocephalia, except that very
near the close of the period there appeared small, slender, small-
FiG. 25. — Restorat-ion of Scymouria, Uic mosl primiti\c of known cotylosaur
reptiles. From the Permian of Texas, about two feet long.
legged aquatic forms which seem to be the ancient representatives of
the real salamanders of modern times. Some of the Stegocephalians
had become greatly speciahzed as legless, snake-Hkc, or eel-like
creatures.
By the beginning of Permian times tremendous changes had
taken place in the land life. The small amphibians of the Car-
boniferous types dwindled away, soon to disappear, and their
places were taken by others of j)eculiar types, for the most part
larger; and by many and diverse kinds of reptiles — water reptiles,
marsh reptiles, land reptiles, and even climbing tree reptiles.
From the uppermost Carl^onifcrous and Lower Permian rocks of
THE AGE OF REPTILES
49
the United States more than fifty genera and twice that many
species of anij^hibians and reptiles have been made known in
recent years, and doubtless as many more will be discovered in thr
future. From other parts of the world the history of reptiles of
the Lower Permian is yet scanty, two or three forms from South
America, as many more from Africa, and a half-dozen or so from
Europe are all; and of these very few are known at all well.
We classify all the known forms of reptiles from the Lower
Permian under three or four orders,
the Cotylosauria, Theromorpha or
Pelycosauria, Proganosauria, and
possibly the Protorosauria, but the
classification is yet provisional,
representing merely the present
stage of our kno wedge. The Pro-
ganosauria and Protorosauria,
including distinctively aquatic
reptiles, will be more fully
described in the following pages.
To give even a brief description of
the more terrestrial reptiles of this,
the earliest known reptilian fauna,
would be beyond our purpose; the
accompanying life restorations by
the author of some of the more
typical and better known forms,
based upon nearly perfect skele-
tons, \\\\\ suffice.
From the reptiles and amphib-
ians of the Lower Permian of Texas and New Mexico to the
ichthyosaurs of the Middle Triassic of California there is a
complete gap in the records of the land life of North America.
We do not know what became of all the remarkable animals
of the Permian. There are few traces of their descendants else-
where known, unless it be in South Africa. From the Middle
and Upper Permian of South Africa and Russia, a marvelous rep-
tilian fauna has been made known in recent vears. More than a
Fig. 26.— Caplorhinus, a cotylosaur
reptile from Texas, about one-fourth
natural size.
50 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST A\D PRESENT
hundred species of six or seven groups, and at least two orders have
been described. Of these the Cotylosauria are the continuation
of the American order, but include more speciahzed forms, the
Pareiasauria and the Procolophonia, all of them, like the more
primitive American forms, characterized by the imperforate
temporal region. The Therapsida, likewise, seem to be the con-
tinuation of the American Theromorpha. so closely allied to them
that it is difficult to draw a distinguishing line between them.
On the other hand, these African reptiles merge through the
Theriodontia into the mammals in the Triassic. Thev are all
Fig. 27. — Resloration of Liibidosaiinis, a colylosiuir reptile from Texas, about
three feet long.
terrestrial, crawling reptiles, except a few which are described
on a later page under the Anomodontia.
The records of the lower part of the Triassic period are scanty
everywhere in the world, save perhaps in Africa. Before the close
of the period, however, probably every important group of cold-
blooded air-breathing animals had made its appearance in geological
history, if we except the snakes; even the mammals had appeared,
and possibly the birds. The Cotylosauria, Theromorpha, and
Therapsida disappeared, the latter giving birth to the mammals;
the nothosaurs and plesiosaurs, the ichthyosaurs, dinosaurs, croco-
diles, phytosaurs, rhynchocephalians, lizards, and turtles have all
left records of their existence in Upper Triassic rocks; and the
pterodactyls had also, in all probability, begun their career,
though none is surely known till the Jurassic.
THE AGE OF REPTILES 51
During Jurassic times all these orders of reptiles waxed i)r()s-
perous and powerful, and branched out in many ways and in count-
less numbers; many new kinds of each appeared- the marine
crocodiles, the quadrupedal dinosaurs, etc. but no order or sub-
order, so far as we know, disappeared before its close. And this
prosperity continued on into the Lower Cretaceous and for many
even into the Upper Cretaceous. The largest dinosaurs disap[)eared
in the Lower Cretaceous, so far as our knowedge goes, but the
^/^-i-%i .
Fig. 28. — Restoration of Dimcirodon, a pelycosaur reptile from the Permian of
Texas; about eight feet long.
old-fashioned crocodiles continued on into the Upper, to give place
to the new-fashioned kinds. The ichthyosaurs Hngered on for a
while on the western continent, but the mosasaurs appeared, and
the plesiosaurs reached their highest evolution and continued
to the end. The flying reptiles attained the zenith of their evolu-
tion, but disappeared before the close. The marine turtles attained
the maximum of specialization and size. The upright-walking
dinosaurs continued on unabated to the close of the period; and a
new kind of dinosaurs appeared near the end.
52 ]yATER REPTILES OF THE FAST AND PRESENT
With the opening of the next great era — the Cenozoic or Tertiary
— the reptiles dwindled away to their present insignificant position,
while the birds and mammals appeared in great numbers and
varied forms. The Age of Reptiles was closed and the Age of
Mammals had begun.
The history of the reptiles during the Cenozoic is an uneventful
one; they ceased their dominion upon land, in the water, and in the
air. Their remains are scanty, for the most part, in the rocks of
the Tertiary, and such as are known differ only in details from those
now living. The land tortoises only, like the mammals of Oligocene
and Miocene times, seized the opportunities of open prairies and
prospered. A few of the late Mesozoic forms continued a short
while into the Eocene. No new groups, perhaps few new families,
came into existence during the greater part of this time; it was
the age only of lan-l tortoises and the poisonous snakes among
reptiles.
EXTINCT REPTILES OF NORTH AMERICA
The oldest known fossil reptile of North America, or indeed
of the world, is represented by a single specimen, lacking the skull,
from black shales of Middle Pennsylvanian age overlying a coal
seam at Linton, Ohio. The specimen was originally described as
an amphibian, but was later recognized by Professor Cope as a true
reptile. It was more fully described by the writer under the name
Eosauravus Copei, who agreed with Cope as to its reptilian nature.
Until the skull is discovered, however, the precise relationships of
the animal must remain doubtful.
The next later rocks that have yielded reptihan remains are
those of Illinois and Texas formerly supposed to be of Permian age.
Later evidence, furnished by invertebrates, however, seems to
prove that the lowermost of the strata are of uppermost Carbonifer-
ous age. The Illinois deposits, so far as known, are of very Hmited
extent, consisting practically of a single bone-bed in black shale in
the immediate valley of the Kaskaskia River near Danville. The
known fossils from this bone-bed — all isolated bones — are preserved
in the museum of the University of Chicago, and include the types
of several genera later recognized in the Texas deposits.
THE AGE OF REPTILES
53
The deposits of Texas, extending norliiwiird through Oklahoma
to the south Hnc of Kansas, are of consick-rable extent, for the most
part lying along the Wichita River and its tributaries, north of
Seymour, Texas. They are composed chielly of red clays and
sandstones of fresh-water or delta origin, perhaps eight hundred
feet in total thickness. Beds of like character and yielding similar
fossils are also known from northern New Mexico on the tributaries
of the Chama River. Their chief characters, as well as restorations
of some of the more noteworthy forms, have already been given.
No vertebrate fossils are known in America from the Upper
Permian and Lower Triassic. IVIarine limestones of Middle and
Fig. 29. — Restoration of Vanuwps, a theromorph reptile from tlie Permian of
Texas; about four feet long.
Upper Triassic age of Nevada and northern California have yielded
numerous remains of primitive ichthyosaurs, the only known re-
mains of the thalattosaurs, and a few others of doubtful affinities,
all of which have been described by Dr. Merriam. The Upper
Triassic exposures, of considerable extent, occur between the Pitt
River and Squaw Creek in Shasta County, Cahfornia. Reptilian
remains from the Middle Triassic are so far known only from the
limestones of West Humboldt and New Pass regions of western and
central Nevada.
Land reptiles of Middle and Upper Triassic age are known from
many widely separated localities in the United States, but chiefl\-
from the extensive "red beds" of the Rocky Mountain region
54 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
The fossils from these beds occur for the most part at least in the
horizon called the Shinarump. Its age is usually considered to be
Upper Triassic. but the character of the fossils seems to indicate
possibly the Middle Triassic. Aside from the stereospondylian
amphibians, the last of the Stegocephalia, the vertebrates from this
horizon and these regions are chiefly Phytosauria. A few anomo-
donts, or what seem to be anomodonts — the only record of their
occurrence outside of Africa — are known from Wyoming and Utah.
And a single specimen from the Wind River red beds, described
by the writer as Dolichohrachiiim, may represent reptiles allied to
the dinosaurs. Phytosaur fossils of this horizon have been dis-
covered in Utah, the Wind River Mountains, and near Laramie
City in Wyoming; in southwestern Colorado; in western Texas;
and in various places in New Mexico and Arizona. Doubtless
when these fossiliferous beds are more thoroughly explored many
new and interesting reptiles will be discovered.
Phytosaur remains, probably of about the same age as the Rocky
Mountain ones, have long been known from the Triassic of North
Carolina. From somewhat more recent Triassic deposits in Con-
necticut and Massachusetts, several skeletons of small carnivorous
dinosaurs, and various parasuchian remains have been described
by Marsh, Lull, and Talbot. And these beds have long been
famous in Massachusetts for their footprints, for the most part
originally referred to birds, but now pretty well known to have
been made by dinosaurs and amphibians.
No vertebrate fossils of Lower or even Middle Jurassic age are
known from North America. From the Baptanodon beds of Wyo-
ming, limestones of about two hundred feet in thickness, four
genera of plesiosaurs, the very peculiar ichthyosaur from which
the beds take their name, and a few bones of an ancient crocodile
are known.
Immediately overlying the Baptanodon beds, the Morrison beds,
of from two hundred to four hundred feet in thickness, probably
of Uppermost Jurassic and Lowermost Cretaceous age, have yielded
an exceedingly rich vertebrate fauna, consisting chiefly of dinosaurs.
Discovered first in the vicinity of Morrison, Colorado, in 1877,
hundreds of tons of bones have been collected from these beds for
THE AGE OE REPTILES
5.^
various museums. The dinosaurs include many genera of all three
suborders, varying in size from that of a cat to some of the largest
known land animals. Of other reptiles a very few jaws of a true
rhynchocephalian. a fragment of a wing bone of a pterodact\l.
numerous turtles, and crocodiles, only, are known. The beds are
predominantly black-clay shales, intercalated with sandstones, and
all are of fresh-water origin.
From beds definitely known as Lower Cretaceous (Trinity)
in Oklahoma, a few bones of a sauropod dinosaur are known, and
Fig. 30. — Restoration of Casea, a theromorph reptile from the Permian of Texas,
about four feet lonj;.
from nearly corresponding rocks in southern Kansas, plesiosaurs.
crocodiles, turtles, and carnivorous dinosaurs are known from
sparse remains. Doubtless the Potomac beds of Virginia, which
have yielded bones of various dinosaurs, are also of Lower
Cretaceous age.
With the exception of a single vertebra of doubtful affinities
and the cast of a turtle-shell no vertebrate fossils have ever
been discovered in the extensive sandstones of Dakota age, the
lowermost of the Upper Cretaceous. From the next horizon above
the Dakota, the Benton Cretaceous, chiefly marine limestones, at
56 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
least three genera of plesiosaurs are known from Kansas, Texas,
and Arkansas, with two or three more from the Hmestone shales
of Wyoming. A few specimens of armored dinosaurs, two genera
of ancient crocodiles, nearly the last of their kind, some marine
turtles, and a few vertebrae of ichthyosaurs, the last of the order
known anywhere in the world, are also known from the Benton
Cretaceous of \V}'oming.
Continuous with the Benton limestones above in Kansas are
the famous beds of Niobrara chalk; perhaps no fossil deposits in
the world are more famous. Exposures covering hundreds of
square miles in western Kansas, almost pure chalk, have furnished
fossil-hunters during the past forty years literally thousands of
specimens of mosasaurs, hundreds of pterodactyls, and scores of
plesiosaurs and marine turtles, in addition to the famous birds with
teeth and countless fishes of diverse kinds. Two or three specimens
of spoon-billed dinosaurs have been found in these deposits, but no
other reptiles of any kinds. Beds of like age in Colorado and New
Mexico have furnished a few specimens of mosasaurs.
From the marine beds of Fort Pierre age, next above the Nio-
brara in the west, have come some excellent specimens of two genera
of mosasaurs, three or four forms of plesiosaurs, a few pterodactyls,
the largest of all marine turtles, and still fewer specimens of dino-
saurs, in Kansas, South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana. From
deposits of approximately like age in Mississippi, Alabama, and
New Jersey, many incomplete specimens were found years ago of
mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, and turtles, the last of the amphicoelian
crocodiles, the first of the prococlian crocodiles, and the famous
specimen of Hadrosaurus which served for the Hawkins restoration,
the first attempt of its kind.
From the uppermost Cretaceous beds of America, the Lance,
Judith River, or Belly River beds as they are variously called, have
come the remains of a marvelous reptilian fauna. These beds may
be grouped together though not all contemporaneous, and there is
dispute about their age, some excellent paleontologists insisting
that the uppermost are really of Eocene age. From Colorado east
of Denver, from eastern Wyoming, from Montana, and especially
from the vicinitv of Edmonton in Canada, as also occasionallv in
THE AGE OF REPTILES 57
western Texas and New Mexico, have come many marvelous speci-
mens of dinosaurs, huge bipedal carnivorous dinosaurs, great spoon-
billed aquatic dinosaurs, armored stegosaurian dinosaurs, and many
kinds of the great horned dinosaurs, the Ceratopsia, so far known
only from these beds. Here at the very close of the Age of Reptiles,
at the close of the Age of Dinosaurs, are found the ultimate speciali-
zations of all the chief groups of dinosaurs except the long-necked
quadrupedal dinosaurs which gave up the ghost in Lower Cretaceous
times. Many were provided with horns and spines, some indeed
seemed to have bristled with spines throughout, a sure sign that
they were approaching the end of their career. The modern type
of crocodiles had usurped the ancient forms of the early Cretaceous,
and reached the largest size of their race perhaps, though but few
specimens are known. Here also in these beds we find the first
representatives of lizards and snakes in America, though snakes
have been described from earlier strata, perhaps, in Brazil. Those
archaic, old-fashioned ryhnchocephalians described on a later page
as the Choristodera appeared also for the first time in these beds,
and persisted for a little while in the Eocene, in Europe and America.
And with all these there has very recently been described the last of
the plesiosaurs, whose race went out with the dinosaurs at the very
close of the Mesozoic. It is needless to say that the turtles also
occur, for, as a general rule, wherever vertebrate fossils are found,
in rocks of the land or the sea, marine or fresh-water, there will
be some bones of turtles among them.
With the beginning of the Cenozoic the record of the reptiles
becomes relatively scanty in America. In the warm waters of the
old Eocene lakes and rivers of Wyoming lived countless crocodiles,
true crocodiles of modern aspect and of large size. But, as the
climate of North America grew progressively colder, the crocodiles
retreated to the south, till, in the Oligocene, the scanty remains
of the last crocodiles are found in the American Tertiary. On the
other hand, as the open lands appeared toward the close of the Eo-
cene, and in the Oligocene and Miocene, the land tortoises throve
and grew greatly in size. In the Bad Lands of South Dakota one
may see their remains in almost incredible numbers. And in
equally great numbers are these land tortoises, in shape much like
58 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
the common box tortoise of today, but vastly larger, found in the
rocks of the late Miocene or early Pliocene age in western Kansas.
And these are the last records of the big tortoises in North America;
their descendants are perhaps yet living in the Galapagos Islands.
The history of the lizards and snakes, the only other reptiles
found in the Cenozoic rocks of America, is very brief. A few
specimens from the Lower Eocene of Wyoming; a few skinks
and amphisbaenas from the Oligocene Bad Lands of South Dakota,
and some bones of a python-like snake in the early Eocene of Wyo-
ming are about all that we know of the Squamata in the Tertiary.
Doubtless snakes and lizards were just as abandunt then as now,
though but few were preserved, for they are and always have been
distinctly terrestrial animals, that only by accident fell into places
where they could be fossilized.
The author has collected reptile bones from nearly all of the
horizons here mentioned and believes that the list is complete.
CHAPTER V
ADAPTATION OF LAND REPTILES TO LIFE IN THE WATER
In the never-ceasing struggle for existence all forms of life
upon the earth, whether consciously or unconsciously, are con-
tinuously striv-ing for improvement; striving to flee from adverse
environments, or to adapt themselves better to those which must
be endured; to escape their enemies, or to find means whereby
they may withstand them; to find more or better food, or to pre
vent others from despoiling them of what they have. There is
always more or less of unrest, more or less of discontent, if such
terms may be used of the lower organisms. It sometimes happens
with groups of organisms that by reason of unusual or extraordinary
traits they become so perfectly adapted to their environments, to
their surroundings, or so easily adaptable to changes in their
environments, that they remain for long ages securely protected and
little changed. But, as with man himself, improvement is usually
the result of adversity — adversity which stimulates but does not
destroy. And the word improvement, translated into biological
language, means simply specialization, that specialization which
adapts the organism better to its mode of Hfe, which fits it the
better to excel its less ambitious or less capable competitors. No
animals or plants are perfect; if they were, there would be no
advancement, no struggle. If all physical conditions stood still,
or remained uniform, perhaps life would stand still, but conditions ^
never have and never will stand still, and life must change to meet
changed conditions.
Thus it is that that which makes hfe easier, which lessens the
dangers of destruction, which insures the continued prosperity of
the race, is seized upon and utilized by all plants and animals, so
far as possible. As said long ago by Tennyson,' the first law of life
• Are God and Nature then at strife,
That Nature lends such evil dreams?
So careful of the type she seems
So careless of the single life. — In Mcmoriam. Iv.
59
i,
6o WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AXD PRESENT
is not the preservation of self, but the prosperity of the race. What-
ever the causes may be whereby the offspring are better adapted to
conquer in the struggle for existence, whatever may be the laws
governing changes and specialization, whether heredity. Mendelism,
mutation, natural selection, or Lamarckism, we call the process
evolution.
To escape from the severe competition of the overcrowdiftg
animals of the sea, some of those creatures we call fishes long ago
became air-breathers and took possession of the unoccupied land.
From among the myriads which were driven into unbreathable
water, by accident or by their enemies, or led there in the search
for more easily acquired or better food, some survived and found
that the oxygen of the air was quite as breathable as that of the
water. Steadily their progeny became better and better adapted
to the unusual life until they ceased to be fishes and became amphib-
ians, from which have arisen in like manner all the reptiles and
birds and mammals that live or have lived upon the earth.
With more and better powers, developed under better oppor-
tunities, not a few of these descendants have repeatedly sought
safety from their newly acquired enemies of the overcrowded land,
or a better supply of food in the sea; gradually, perhaps incidentally
at first, as we shall see is the case with some lizards today, but
later with increased adaptation to their new surroundings, they
become truly sea or water animals, no longer able to live upon
the land. In these changed conditions and with concomitantly
changed habits they never reverted to the primitive condition of
fishes, never became water-breathing animals again, for that would
be actual retrogression, a seeming impossibility in evolution. Nor
indeed does it seem possible that a land creature after its reversion
to water life ever can return to the land again.
A fish through long ages of evolution has become well adapted
to its environments; its shape is the best for speed or varied
evolutions in the water; its teeth and mouth-organs are best suited
for the food it requires. Now it is evident that if animals of very
different habits and form should go back to the water and seek
to compete with creatures already well adapted to their surround-
ings, they must, so far as possible, acquire like forms and like
ADAPTATION OF LAND REPTILES TO LIFE IN WATER 6i
habits. And any improvement on such forms and habits that
their higher development permits them to attain will of course be
of advantage in their competitive struggles. A lish makes most
use of its tail lin for propulsion. It follows that a land animal
seeking to compete with it under like conditions must acquire a
tail lin or some other organ which subserves its purpose as fully.
The body fins are of little use to a fish, save for equilibration, for
preserving its position, for stopping quickly, or for changing the
direction of its movements quickly — very different functions from
those of the corresponding organs, the hmbs, of higher vertebrates.
There are few better examples of predaceous, lish-eating fishes than
the common gar-pike of our rivers, fishes with a slender body
covered with very smooth scales, a strong tail, a short neck, and
long jaws armed with numerous slender and sharp teeth. Such a
fish, darting into a school of smaller fishes, by quick, sudden changes
of movement, actively opening and closing its jaws, is sure to seize
some of its sought-for prey. In a direct trial of speed with its
victims it would most likely be worsted.
There have been many animals of high and low rank which in
the past and present have gone back from a terrestrial existence
to a Hfe in the water, finding at last a congenial home away from
the shores. Or, perhaps, like the monitor lizards of today, they
have found temporary safety in the water when hard pressed by
their land enemies, and finally found, not only protection, but
an abundant supply of easily obtainable food therein. As in every
vocation of life there have been many failures in such attempts,
many partial successes only. But not a few have found abounding
and enduring success and final prosperity — success that has- led
possibly to undue adaptation to surroundings, and to the acquire-
ment of great size, for that has been the invariable end of water
air-breathers of long duration — specializations which finally pre-
vented them from meeting new exigencies. It seems to be a law
of evolution that no large creatures can give rise to races of
smaller creatures; and as we shall see, the largest sea animals
have been the final evolution of their respective races.
There are no better examples of such success today, nor has there
been in all the geological ages, so far as we know, more perfect
62 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AXD PRESENT
examples of the adaptation of air-breathing animals to an aquatic
life than the great whalebone whales. In Eocene times their
ancestors were walking and running land animals; of that there
can be not the slightest doubt, since we cannot conceive, as did the
older naturalists, of their direct descent from the fishes while having
all the essential structure of mammals, i.e., lungs, circulatory sys-
tem, manner of breeding and rearing the young, etc. Of the living
whales, or Cetacea, there are now in existence two very distinct
types, so different from each other that some have supposed them
to have been evolved from different types of land mammals. One of
these is best exemplified by the great baleen whale, having a broad,
short head and no teeth. It feeds upon crustaceans chiefly, which
are strained from the water by the great fringe or net of "whale-
bone." The other type is seen in the porpoise or dolphin. These
cetaceans have numerous, pointed and recurved teeth, which they
use as did many of the reptiles, hereinafter described, for the seizure
and retention of fishes and other swimming animals. So great have
been the changes in all these cetaceans, in the adaptation to an
aquatic fife, that we are almost at a loss to conjecture from what
kinds of land animals they have descended. The great zeuglodont
whales of early Tertiary times have long been thought to be a sort
of connecting link between them and their land ancestors, and it
is still probable that they were. The forms of zeuglodont whales
that have been discovered in Africa within recent years bear so
much resemblance in their skull and teeth to the contemporary
carnivores, that many paleontologists think, with good reason, that
they were descended from them, that is, from the ancestors of all
our dogs, cats, weasels, bears, etc., of modern times. And we have
much reason to believe that future discoveries will bring further
and more decisive proof of their origin ])efore many years have
elapsed. The modern Sirenia, the dugongs and manatees, exclu-
sively aquatic mammals, which feed upon seaweeds at the bottoms
of shallow bays and harbors, or in the mouths of rivers, are now
known, practically with certainty, to be the descendants in these
same African regions of the earliest ancestors of our sheep, oxen,
and horses, known so certainly that they are often classed with
them, or at least with the elephants, which approach them in their
ancestral line even more closely.
ADAPTATION OF LAND REPTILES TO LIFE I.\ WATER 63
A third type of living aquatic air-breathers is seen in the seals,
sea-lions, etc. They are much less highly specialized, however,
than the whales or sirenians. since they are still capable of con-
siderable freedom upon land, which they recurrently seek for the
breeding of their young. They still retain the primitive covering
of hair, lost almost entirely by the cetaceans and sirenians and func-
tionally replaced for the conservation of heat by a thick layer of
blubber. Instead of losing the hind legs and developing the tail
as a propelling organ like the whales, the seals encountered pre-
cisely the reverse experience. The hind legs have been developed
into most efficient paddles or sculls, and the tail has been for the
most part lost. They are fish-eaters, it is true, but they do not
have the long jaws possessed by the porpoises and toothed whales.
In the sea-otters, beavers, and even the muskrats, we have
examples of less complete adaptation of land mammals to water
Hfe, the most of them showing the beginnings at least of structural
adaptations similar to those of the seals. From an attentive
examination of all these animals, living as well as extinct, which
have attained partial or complete success as air-breathing water
animals, we find certain laws existing, if we may call them such,
which we may discuss a little in detail. As we have seen in the
comparison of the whale with the seal, the methods of adaptation
have not always been the same, and some recent writers have
endeavored to classify aquatic animals under many groups, to
which they have given learned technical names, most of which will
not concern us here in dealing with the reptiles only.
Beginning with the head, we find that all those reptiles and most
of the mammals which have become aquatic fish-eaters have an
elongated skull, or rather an elongated face. The jaws are long and
slender, and the teeth are not only numerous but also sharp and
slender, much hke those of the gar-pike, indeed. It is remarkable,
too, that in most such animals the external nostrils are situated,
not at the extremity of the snout, as in all terrestrial mammals
and reptiles, but far back near the eyes. In the whales this position
of the nostril enables the animals to breathe without continuous
muscular exertion while floating on the surface; that is, the nostrils
are at the top of the head. In the sirenians, on the other hand,
which live habitually at the bottom of shallow waters, coming to
64 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
the surface to breathe only, the nostrils are situated so that they
arc the first to emerge, that is, they are near the front end. The
crocodiles, with a more or less elongated face, as also the Choristo-
dera, described farther on, are exceptions, since their nostrils are
at the extremity of the snout. Both of these types, however, not-
withstanding the elongation of the face, are only partly aquatic in
habit, and in the crocodiles the breathing organs have undergone
a strange modification in accordance with habits peculiarly their
own, as will be explained later on. Whether this recession of the
nostril toward the eyes can be explained in all cases by the peculiar
breathing habits is, however, doubtful. Possibly in some cases,
such as the phytosaurs, described later, the creatures used their
long beaks to probe in the mud while breathing. Possibly the
posterior position has been in some cases rather the result of the
elongation of the face, lea\ang the nostrils behind in some forms,
or carrying them forward in others. Nevertheless posterior nos-
trils always indicate more or less aquatic habits.
In all the earUest reptiles, as we have seen, the neck was short,
like that of their immediate progenitors, the ancient amphibians.
The shoulders were close to the skull, with not more than two verte-
brae that could be called cervical. It happens that most of the
earliest reptiles, as we know them, were more or less amphibious in
habit, and all of them were probably good swimmers; nevertheless
in all likelihood reptiles began their career as a class with a very
short neck. The earhest known distinctly terrestrial reptiles had
a moderately long neck composed of six or seven cervical vertebrae.
It may therefore be assumed with much probability that all later
reptiles with a greater or less number of cervical vertebrae are
specialized animals, so far as the neck is concerned. Most h\dng
reptiles have eight cervical vertebrae; a few have nine, and still
fewer have Ijut fn'e. Birds may have as many as twenty-four,
while all mammals, with two or three exceptions, have the primitive
number seven. Among extinct reptiles, however, there were not
a few with more numerous neck vertebrae, some having the enor-
mous number of seventy-six.
An ordinary fish has apparently no neck whatever, the trunk
being seemingly attached to the head, nearly as in the primitive
ADAPTATION OF LAND REPTILES TO LIFE IN WATER 65
amphibians and primitive reptiles. It is evident that a movable
neck of considerable length would not only be of no use to the
swiftly swimming fish, but a positive disadvantage to it. The
body is quickly and easily turned by the powerful tail fin, and a
long neck could be of no use that the tail would not better subserve.
It is therefore of interest to learn that, as a rule, aquatic animals
of all kinds having a powerful propelling tail have also a short neck,
acquired either by the loss of neck vertebrae, or, as in the mammals,
by the shortening and coalescence of the normal number of seven.
There are very few exceptions to this rule of a short neck and a
long tail. Those strange little reptiles of Paleozoic times, the first
that we know that returned to the water, the Proganosauria, have
not only a long, flattened tail, but also an unduly elongated neck
of from nine to twelve vertebrae.
On the other hand, certain unrelated reptiles of the past, the
dolichosaurs, nothosaurs, and plesiosaurs, with a short non-
propelling tail, developed a long neck — sometimes an excessively
long one in the plesiosaurs. The turtles, some of which have
attained a high adaptation to water fife, have invariably a short
tail and a freely movable, relatively long neck, a neck which Dr.
Hay tells us has increased in length from the beginning of their
race by the simple elongation of the vertebrae, as in the giraffe,
and never by the addition of vertebrae. We may then account it a
rule that swimming animals with a long neck have a short tail, and
those with a short tail have a long flexible neck. Even in the
plesiosaurs there is some variation of the length of the tail in corre-
lation with the neck. Short- tailed animals must necessarily propel
themselves through the water by the aid of their legs, especially
the hind legs. If one watches an actively swimming alligator he
will observe that the front legs are folded or collapsed by the side
of the body, while the hind legs, much bent, are used only slightly
in propulsion. The animal swims by a marked sinuous or serpen-
tine movement, like that of a snake upon land, extending through-
out the tail and part of the body, at least. An animal propelling
itself by its limbs could not move sinuously, and use its legs actively
at the same time, and it is probable that the long neck has been
evolved compensatorily.
66 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
With this shortening of the neck and sinuosity of movement
there is developed in every case a long trunk as well as a long tail.
The trunk becomes more slender and cylindrical, more like that of a
snake, with an actual increase of the bones composing it, reaching
the great number of forty-three vertebrae in that most sinuous of
all water reptiles with legs, Pleurosaurus of the Protorosauria.
And the tail, primitively having perhaps sixty or seventy vertebrae,
may have as many as one hundred and fifty in the more typical
aquatic forms. This elongation of trunk and tail must be of great
advantage to the swimming reptile, just as the racing scull is a
more perfect type of speedy craft than a fiat-bottomed scow. Dr.
Woodward has said that the fate of all fishes, if they continue their
evolution long enough, is to become eel-like.
Not only was the tail greatly elongated in swimming reptiles,
but it was also more or less flattened. In the beginning of water
adaptation the flattening was throughout the tail, as in the living
alligators and crocodiles. As the adaptation to water life became
more perfect, the flattening became more and more restricted to the
extremity; that is, the flattening begins like that of a salamander
and in the end becomes like that of a fish, a terminal fin. And
some of the actual stages in the evolution of the fish-like fin have
been observed by Dr. Merriam in the earlier and more primitive
ichthyosaurs of California. In those animals swimming chiefly
in a horizontal direction the tail fin has become like that of fishes,
that is, vertical; but in those animals which use the tail chiefly for
ascending and descending rapidly in the water the fin is developed
in a horizontal position, examples of which are seen in the flukes of
whales and sirenians.
All animals living upon the land require firm articulations
between the different bones of the skeleton, and especially between
the vertebrae, for the support and control of the body. Among
aquatic animals there is a strong tendency toward looseness
of joints, with increasing flexibility. Fishes have the articular
processes between the arches of the vertebrae feebly or not at all
developed, and the centra or bodies of the vertebrae have thick
pads of cartilage between them. Firm union between the verte-
brae would restrict freedom of movement, and firmness is not
ADAPTATION OF LAND REPTILES TO LIFE J.\ WATER 67
required when the body is surrounded on all sides by water of nearly
the same specific gravity as the body itself. And it is douljtiess
for the same reasons that the articulations of all strictly aquatic
reptiles have for the most part become looser and less firm, espe-
cially those between the dilTerent vertebrae.
The same looseness of articulation is also found in the ribs of
aquatic animals. In most animals, and in all those which walk
erect, like the mammals, each rib is firmly attached to the back-
bone by two distinct joints, the head and tubercle, with an interval
between them. This double attachment prevents much in-and-out
movement of the ribs and gives a firm support for the attach-
ment of the muscles of respiration, as well as for those supporting
the viscera. This firmness is unnecessary in animals living always
in the water, and the ribs therefore in all aquatic animals tend to
become single-headed and loose. The lower or capitular articula-
tion has been lost in part, or almost wholly, in many cetaceans. It
has been said that a whale cast up on land will die of suft'ocation,
not for the lack of air, for it is an air-breathing animal like ourselves,
but because it can no longer use its respiratory muscles attached
to the loosely articulated ribs; it suffocates because the ribs
collapse.
As would be expected, the greatest modifications of structure
in the adaptation of air-breathers to water life are found in the
limbs. No other parts of the body have such different functions in
water and on land as the limbs and fins. The limbs of a dog, or a
cat, or a man are feeble organs for swimming in comparison with the
fins of a fish, and if the land animal must compete with fishes to
prey upon them for food it must acquire like swimming powers.
As a matter of fact, the limbs of all typically aquatic air-breathing
animals have lost nearly all external resemblance to the legs of
walking and running animals, and have become more or less fin-like
in function — fin-like in shape and function, but never fin-like in
actual structure. No creature can go back and begin over again,
any more than a man can again become a child with all its possi-
bilities for improvement and development. If an animal cannot
modify the organs it already possesses so as to adapt them to new
and changed uses by the aid of evolutionary forces it must fail in
68 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
the struggle. It can never acquire new material, never get new
fingers and toes, new organs or parts of organs; all its possibilities
lie in the improved and new uses it can make of the material which
it received from its ancestors.
The beginning of aquatic adaptation of the limbs lies in the
membranous webs between the toes of frogs, salamanders, ducks,
seal, otters, etc., where the feet are used largely or entirely for pro-
pulsion through the water, in the absence of a propelling tail. And
this membrane, in the majority of cases, is the extent of aquatic
adaptation in air-breathing animals. In those animals, however,
such as most of the reptiles described in the following pages, where
the tail has developed as the propelling organ, the limbs lose to a
greater or less extent their propelHng function and become merely
organs of equilibration and control. Of the two pairs of fins of fishes
it is evident that the anterior ones have the more important equili-
brational function; the hind ones have a much less important use as
guiding organs; as a matter of fact, in not a few fishes the hind or
pelvic fins have actually migrated forward to supplement the func-
tion of the pectoral fins. It is for these reasons that those animals
best adapted of all for life in the water — the whales and sirenians —
have lost the hind legs completely. In other tail-propelled air-
breathers the hind legs have become progressively smaller and
less powerful than the front ones. In all short-tailed water animals,
however, where the legs, and especially the hind legs, have the
important function of propulsion to subserve, they still retain
the large size and firm connections with the body, examples
of which will be seen in the seals, sea-otters, marine turtles, and
plesiosaurs.
Because the legs are no longer needed for the support or propul-
sion of the body in long-tailed air-breathers, their connection with
the body becomes less and less firm, long before their entire dis-
ai)pearance. In animals using the legs for crawling or walking
the bones of an arm and thigh are elongated, and the joints are
always well formed, permitting varied, extensive, and firm move-
ments. Just the reverse is the tendency in all those animals that
propel themselves by the aid of the tail in the water, since here what
is needed js broad, short limbs, not long and slender ones.
ADAPTATION OF LAND REPTILES TO LIFE IX WATER (h)
Most reptiles have five digits on each hand or foot; the bones
of the wrist and ankle are well formed, as in mammals, and the
digits are elongate, with a very definite arrangement of the bones
composing them, as already described, never exceeding i'wv in iinv
one finger or toe.
In the paddles of- water reptiles, as the limbs are usually called,
the bones of the first segment, that is, the humerus and femur, are
always greatly shortened in those having a propelling tail, and
even in some with a short tail, such as the seals, and in a lesser degree
in the sea-otters. On the other hand, in those animals which use
the legs chiefly for direct propulsion these bones are elongated, as
exemplified by the plesiosaurs and marine turtles. In all save
the seals and their kind, and the otters, whose legs are used rather
as sculls than as oars, the bones of the next segment, the radius
and ulna of the front pair, the tibia and fibula of the hind pair,
are always shortened, and one can tell the stage of aquatic adapta-
tion, as exemplified, for instance, in the plesiosaurs and ichthyosaurs
by the degree of shortening of these bones. Indeed, the first sug-
gestion in any crawling animal of water habits is shown in the
relative lengths of the epipodial bones, as these bones are called.
Furthermore, cursorial or terrestrial habits are suggested by the
relative size of the smaller bone of the leg, that on the little-toe
side, the fibula. In birds, pterodactyls, and most running animals,
it disappears in part or wholly. In swimming animals it tends
to grow larger than the tibia, as will be conspicuously seen in the
paddle of the mosasaurs.
The bones of the wrist change in two ways: by becoming
cartilaginous, as in whales and salamanders, or by becoming more
firmly ossified and more closely united, as in the plesiosaurs. The
digits always are elongated, often extraordinarily so, either ])y the
elongation of individual bones or phalanges, or by the development
of new bones. These new bones, when they occur, are new growths,
not the reproduction of the old elements of fishes, and there may
be as many as twenty such new elements or phalanges in a single
digit. There is one marked exception among reptiles to this
hyperphalangy, as the increased number of phalanges is called, antl
that is the turtles. As we have seen, in the elongation of the neck
70 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
among turtles there never has been an actual increase in the num-
ber of vertebrae; so also in the elongation of the digits the normal
number of three in each digit has never been exceeded, except among
the river turtles, where there are four in the fourth digit — possibly
a relic of original conditions rather than the beginning of hyper-
phalangy; but the individual bones have become greatly elongated.
In living reptiles, birds and mammals of the land, the fifth toe is
always shorter than the fourth. In the seals, the sea-otter, and to
a less degree in the muskrat, the fifth toe has become elongated.
And the elongation of this toe is the first and most decisive indica-
tion of a webbed foot of strong propelling power among the aquatic
reptiles of the past, as exemplified especially by the proganosaurs.
Finally, in one order of extinct reptiles, the ichthyosaurs, there has
been an actual increase in the number of digits, in some to as many
as nine in each paddle.
In addition to all these modifications of the skeleton, the bones
themselves tend to become softer and more spongy in aquatic
animals. The bones of the whale, as is well known, are very spongy
in texture, and those of the seals and sea-Hons contain an unusually
large amount of oily matter. So, too, the bones of the extinct water
reptiles — of many of them at least — were more spongy than those
of their land relatives; and this is due in part perhaps to their
lessened use as muscular supports, in part perhaps to the necessity
of a lessened specific gravity. As a rule sea-animals need to be of
the same specific gravity as the water in which they live, or a little
less. The bones of the living sirenians, the manatees and dugongs.
so far from being hght and porous, are unusually dense and solid.
The sirenians live habitually at the bottom of shallow waters, feed-
ing upon vegetable growths; and doubtless their bottom-feeding
habits account for the soHdity of the bones. A whale would float
to the top. while a dugong would sink to the bottom, on the relaxa-
tion of all muscular movement. And we shall see that certain
reptiles in the past had in all probability like bottom-feeding habits,
because of the solidity of the bones of their skeletons.
Many birds and fishes have a pecuHar ossification of the usually
tendinous outer covering of the eyeball, called the sclerotic mem-
brane. These ossifications fomi a flattened or somewhat pro-
ADAPTATION OF LAND REPTILES TO LIFE /.V WATER 71
jecting conical bony ring about the pupil of the eye. The individual
bones are flat and more or less imbricated plates, with some motion
between them. Accommodation for vision in reptiles, birds, and
fishes is not the simjile process that it is in mammals, where it is
controlled by simple ciliary muscles which compress the lens, caus-
ing it to assume a more spherical or a more flattened form, thus
changing the focus. In reptiles accommodation is effected by the
compression of the eyeball by means of external muscles, elongating
it and causing its front part to expand or project. The imbricated
sclerotic plates permit this expansion and contraction of the eye-
ball. Under great internal or external air pressure the cornea, the
only unprotected part, must necessarily change its contour unless
some compensatory force is brought to bear to counterbalance it;
and this doubtless was the function of the sclerotic plates so com-
monly present in aquatic reptiles.
Among terrestrial reptiles there are not a few examples of the
ossification of such sclerotic plates, notably among the skink hzards.
Every known form of extinct reptiles of aquatic habit had them, and
even some of the subaquatic dinosaurs, like Diplodocus and Tracho-
don. One may say with assurance that it is impossible for any rep-
tile to become thoroughly adapted to aquatic life without acquiring
large and strong sclerotic plates.
Most land reptiles are or were covered by horny scales or bony
plates; the pterodactyls are the only order of terrestrial reptiles
with no such covering of which w-e have any evidence. Such
coverings are wholly unneeded for animals living in the water.
Not only are they unnecessary, but the increased resistance to the
water would be more or less detrimental to rapid swimming. It
is for these reasons doubtless that bony plates or horny scales dis-
appeared for the most part from the skin of all truly aquatic reptiles
and mammals.
The foregoing are the chief acquired characteristics of aquatic
air-breathing animals and especially aquatic reptiles in adaptation
to their new mode of life. The resemblances, sometimes striking,
thus brought about in animals of very different origin and remote
relationships have often been mistaken for evidences of kinship,
that is, direct inheritance from common ancestors. Such acquired
72 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
resemblances in unrelated animals are known as parallel or con-
vergent evolution. It has often been difficult to distinguish
between convergent evolution and direct evolution, and difiiculties
still perplex and trouble the student of natural history in every
branch of life. Not till all such problems are solved can we hope
to attain the true classification of animals and plants. The whales
a century ago were considered merely breathing fishes; the ichthyo-
saurs until a quarter of a century ago were supposed to be the
direct descendants of fishes; lizards and crocodiles were grouped
together in a single order; and salamanders were called reptiles
not very long ago.
Perhaps the reader will be able from the foregoing to under-
stand and appreciate better some of the difficulties that confront
the paleontologist in his attempts to solve the problems of past life;
to understand why he sometimes makes mistakes, for he has by
no means yet learned all the permutations of the skeleton in any
class of vertebrates, and is not sure that the laws he accepts are
not subject to modifications and exceptions. If he is truly scien-
tific he hesitates long in prophesying or conjecturing.
CHAPTER VI
SAUROPTERYGIA
Very scanty are the early human records of those strange
reptiles known as the plesiosaurs. Were one to search through the
many works published during the latter half of the seventeenth
century and all of the eighteenth, devoted to "lapides petrifacti,"
"figured stones," "reliquia diluvii," or by whatever other fanciful
names fossils were known, here and there he would probably find
descriptions and figures of bones of these reptiles. It would hardly
seem that plesiosaurian bones could have been overlooked by the
curious, so abundant are they in many places. But there is no
such history of the early discovery of the plesiosaurs as there is of
the ichthyosaurs and mosasaurs. Their birth into human history
was very formal and proper, under the ministrations of a learned
doctor of science, the renowned Conybeare, of whom we shall
speak again. It was he, who with De la Beche, late Director of
the British Geological Survey, described for the first time, in 1823,
one of these reptiles, to which he gave the name Plesiosaurus,
meaning "Hke a lizard." He distinguished the plesiosaurs from
ichthyosaurs. with which it is possible that they had previously
been confounded, and gave a good description of considerable
material. Cuvier, a httle later, gave a more complete description
of the same remains which had served Conybeare and De la Beche
for their original description, and for the first time made it evident
that fossil plesiosaurs were widely and abundantly distributed
over the earth. The closing sentence of Cuvier's chapter devoted
to the discussion of these creatures in his Ossemens Fossiles was
really prophetic, not only of the many discoveries of the plesiosaurs
yet to be made, but of all other extinct animals as well: ''I doubt
not that, in a few years it may be, I shall be compelled to say that
the work which I have today finished, and to which I have given
so much labor is but the first glimspe of the immense creations of
ancient times."
73
74
ir.!77i^: REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
SALKOPTERVGIA 7;
In (juick succession there followed many other discoveries of
plesiosaurs, not onh- in England but elsewhere in luirope. The
famous English anatomist and paleontologist. Sir Richard Owen,
to whom we owe, perhaps, more than to anyone else our ])resent
knowledge of these animals, the eccentric Hawkins of England, the
learned von Meyer of Germany, and, in later times, more especially
Seeley and Andrews of England, Fraas of Germany, Bogalobou
and Riabanin of Russia, as well as many others, have brought to
light during the past century many and varied forms of thjse sea-
re])tiles. Blaineville in 1835 gave to the plesiosaurs an ordinal
rank under the class Ichthyosauria, and even the. astute Owen
in 1839 united them with the ichthyosaurs as a suborder of his
Enaliosauria, or "sea-saurians." He called them Sauropterygia, or
''reptile-tinned," and these terms, Enaliosauria, Ichthyopterygia,
and Sauropterygia, have long persisted in works on natural his-
tory because of the prestige of Owen's name. As we shall see later,
the plesiosaurs are really of remote kinship to the ichthyosaurs,
and there is no such natural group as the Enaliosauria. It often
takes years to distinguish between apparent and real relationships
among living organisms, and both of these- groups of sea-saurians
have had a sorry experience in the treatment they have received
from nomenclators.
Perhaps because of the writings of Dean Buckland in his famous
Bridge-water Treatise, in large part a theological disquisition, though
of real scientific merit, the ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs early
became widely and popularly known, and, even to this day, these
reptiles, together with the dinosaurs, first made known by Rev.
Dr. Mantel], are often supposed to be the most typical and horrid
of monsters. Many and fabulous are the tales that have been
told of them in literature both grave and gay. The preacher
adduced them as evidences of the great world-catastrophe told in
biblical history, and the German student sings of them to the tune
of the "Lorelei":
Es rauschl in Schachtelhalmen, vcrdachlig leuchtet das Meer;
Da schwimmt mit Thranen in Auge ein Ichthyosaurus einhcr.
Ihn jammert der Zciten Verderbniss, denn cin sehr bcdenklicIuT Ton
War neucrlich eingerissen in dcr Li:isformalion.
76 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AXD PRESENT
Dcr Plesiosaurus, der alte, der jubelt in Saus und Braus;
Der Pterodactylus selber flog jungst betrunken nach Haus.
Der Iguanodon, dcr Liimmel, wird frecher zu jcglichcr Frist;
Schon hat cr am hcllcn Tage die Ichthosaura gekiissl.
We now know that they were not the monsters of horrid mien
that they were once supposed to be: the largest plesiosaurs, were
they living today, would fmd unopposable foes in the vicious and
cruel crocodiles. They were relatively stupid and slow, cruel
enough to the smaller creatures, but of limited prowess. But in
structure and habits they are among the most remarkable of all
the animals of the past or present.
Although their remains are among the most abundant and
widely distributed of all fossil reptiles, the plesiosaurs as a whole
are less perfectly known than either the ichthyosaurs or the mosa-
saurs, and it has been within a comparatively few years only that
an approximately complete knowledge of any form has been
obtained. This is partly due to the fact that the order comprises
vastly more kinds, more species, genera, and families than does
any other order of marine reptiles; partly because their remains,
though widely distributed over the earth, and in rocks of many
geological epochs, are seldom found completely preserved; usually
specimens comprise only a few bones or single bones, and complete
skeletons are rare. Were there but few kinds, the many specimens
discovered would mutually supplement each other, finally com-
pleting our knowledge; but the fragments of many kinds only add
to our confusion. Nevertheless, because the plesiosaurs lived so
long in geological history, their remains are found in rocks of many
different kinds, and since it is improbable that any of them had
great specific longevity, it is very probable that all these described
species, or most of them, often made known from single bones, will
eventually be found to be distinct, and that many more will be
added to them. It does not seem improbable that within the next
forty or fifty years not less than a hundred species of plesiosaurs
will have been discovered in North America alone. At the present
time perhaps that many have been described from the whole world.
When Blaineville gave the name Plesiosauria to the aquatic
reptiles described by Conybeare, Cuvier, and others, he had no
^AUROPrERYGIA
77
knowledge of others of an intermediate kind between them and
land reptiles. His group-term then can be properly applied only
to the truly aquatic forms, and Owen's name Sauropterygia becomes
available in a wider sense to include all the known ty])es belonging
to the order of which the plesiosaurs form a part. Of this order
then there are two clearly marked divisions or suborders, the
Plesiosauria and the Nothosauria, the former having a complete
aquatic adaptation, the latter only a partial one. While the two
suborders are evidently allied, some authors have suggested that
their differences are only familial; others have thought that they
are really orders. We shall see how close the relationships are.
PLESIOSAURIA
It was Dean Buckland who facetiously likened the plesiosaurs
to a snake threaded through the shell of a turtle, and the simile
was not an inapt one in his day. The vernacular designation of
them — long-necked lizards — conveys the same impression of their
chief peculiarity, but the name is less applicable than it once was,
since recent discoveries have brought to light forms with a relatively
short neck.
Though the plesiosaurs are nearly perfectly adapted to an
aquatic life, the adaptation was, in many respects, of a very differ-
ent kind from that of the ichthyosaurs — so very different that we
have not yet quite finished conjecturing as to the habits of the
living animals. As already suggested in the popular name, the
most striking characteristic of the typical plesiosaurs, the one which
suggested to Buckland his frequently quoted simile, is the ofttimes
enormously long neck, proportionately longer than that of any other
known creatures of the past or present. In other truly aquatic
animals the neck is actually shortened in the acquirement of a fish-
Hke shape, and the number of bones composing it reduced. In the
Sauropterygia the neck is usually longer than any truly land ani-
mals ever possessed, the longest-necked forms having as many as
seventy-six vertebrae in the cervical region. The elongation of the
neck among mammals is always due to an increase in the length of
the individual bones, never to an increase in the number from seven,
with but a single exception — a South American sloth which has
78 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
nine cervical vertebrae. The long neck of birds is due both to an
increase in the length of the individual vertebrae and to an increase
in their number, to as many as twenty-one. But the elongation of
the neck among plesiosaurs was very variable indeed; sometimes
it was ten or twelve times the length of the head, at other times it
was even shorter than the head. And the number of bones com-
posing it was also extremely variable, scarcely any two species
having the same, the known extremes being seventy-six and
thirteen. In Elasmosaurus platyuriis, for instance, the longest-
necked plesiosaur known, the head was two feet in length, the
neck twenty-three, the body nine, and the tail about seven; on the
other hand, in the shortest-necked plesiosaur known, Brachaii-
YiG. 32. — Skeleton of Triuacromcnim osbonii, a Cretaceous plesiosaur, as mounted
in llu' UniNiTsily of Kansas Museum.
chcnius Lucasi. the head was two and one-half feet in length, the
neck less than two feet, and the bod)- al)out five; the length of the
tail is unknown.
Not only was the number of vertebrae so extraordinarily
increased in many plesiosaurs. but in the longest necks the verte-
brae themselves, as in birds, were more or less elongated, especially
the posterior ones, which may be six or seven times the length of
the anterior ones. Not only was the neck of such great length
in many plesiosaurs. but it also tapered very much toward the
head.
The vertebrae are always biconcave, but the cavities are shallow,
saucer-like, sometimes almost flat at each end, and ver\- different
from the conical fish-like cavities of ichthvosaurian vertebrae.
SAL ROriERVCIA
79
3
o
i>
a.
a
B
3
s
S2
c
o
tn
u
Pi
8o
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
Often the vertebrae are short throughout the vertebral column;
sometimes the posterior cervicals and the dorsals are elongated
and very robust. The trunk or body proper was never much
elongated in the plesiosaurs, having only from twenty-five to thirty
vertebrae. The taij was always shorter than the trunk, and it
tapered rapidly to the extremity; in some specimens it has been
observed to turn up slightly near the extremity, as though for the
support of a small terminal fin.
The ribs in the cervical region are short, but so locked together
posteriorly as not to^ permit much lateral motion. They are
«z^x
Fig. 34. — Cen-ical vertebrae, from the side and behind, and dorsal vertebra from
in front of Polycotyliis, a Cretaceous plesiosaur: az, anterior zygapophysis; pz, pos-
terior zygapophysis, r, r, r, cervical ribs; d, articulation of dorsal rib.
sometimes double-headed in the neck, sometimes single-headed, but
both heads when present articulate or are attached to the body of
the vertebrae, distinguishing them at once from those of other
animals, except the ichthyosaurs. In the dorsal region the ribs
are attached high on the arch to the extremity of the stout trans-
verse processes by a single head, very much as they are in some
cetaceans, and quite unlike the condition in any other known
reptile. They end freely below, having no attachment to a
breast bone or other bony parts. Because of their shape and
position as frequently found, the body in life must have been fat-
tened from above downward, and broad; indeed, this shape is
SAURO PTERYGIA
8i
quite certain because_of the very broad expanse of the coracoids,
between tin- articulations of the front legs.
The shoulder girdle or pectoral arch is strangely unlike that of
any other reptiles. There is no breast bone, since the breast bone
Fig. 35. — Pectoral girdle of Tr'ntacromcrum from above: ic, interclavicle; d,
clavicle; sc, scapula; c, coracoid.
is a comparatively late development in reptiles, not appearing,
probably, until after the plesiosaurs had begun their existence.
Taking the place of the sternum, the very large and broad coracoids
82 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
join each other in the middle, forming a sort of subdermal
armor on the under side of the body in front. In some of the
largest plesiosaurs these two bones measured together about six
feet in length by four in width. Though so very large they are
thick only in front between the articulations of the forelegs. The
shoulder-blades are much reduced in size and are extraordinarily
modilied. The blade proper, that is, that part extending backward
and upward, is narrow and small, affording but little surface for
the attachment of muscles. On the inner side, extending toward
the middle in front of the coracoids, there is another projection,
often broad and large, to which was attached the clavicles when
present, and often this projection met its mate of the opposite
scapula in the middle in front of the coracoids in a broad union.
The clavicles or collar-bones are small and thin, and sometimes
absent; they also are united in the middle posteriorly with the
coracoids when the scapula did not intervene. And the inter-
clavicle also is. sometimes wanting. Altogether the pectoral bones
form a very large, broad, and concave trough inclosing the whole
of the under side of the anterior part of the body. This extensive
surface must have furnished attachment to stout and strong muscles
controlling the downward and inward motion of the paddles.
There is a well-developed sacrum of three vertebrae for the
support of the pelvis or hip bones. The reason for its persistence
in animals so thoroughly adapted for life in the water will be under-
stood later. The ilium is slender; it was attached to the sides of
the sacrum by ligaments, only, not forming a firm union, but
strong nevertheless. The pubes and ischia, the other bones of the
pelvis on the under side of the body, like the corresponding bones
of the pectoral girdle, were enormousry^gnlarged, forming great
flat, bony plates.
Besides these large bony plates of the shoulder and pelvic
girdles, the short abdominal region was inclosed by numerous series
of strong ventral ribs, that is, overlapping rod-like bones on each
side, connected with a central piece. It will be seen that the whole
under side of the body, from the base of the neck to the base of the
tail, was well protected by bones, rigid and unyielding in front and
behind, flexible for a short space below the abdomen; this surface.
SMROI'lERYGIA
83
however, was not flat like the under shell of a turtle, but rounded
from side to side.
Fig. 36. — Pelvic girdle from above of Truiacromcni»i oshonii. an Upper Cretaceous
plesiosaur: />, pubis; is, ischium; //, ilium.
Many of the characteristics of the limbs of the plcsiosaurs are
peculiar to themselves; others they had in common with other
84
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
aquatic reptiles and mammals. The paddles resemble those of the
ichthyosaurs more nearly than those of any other reptile, and it
was doubtless this superficial resemblance which so long deceived
the early anatomists as to the affinities of the two orders. Unlike
all other aquatic animals, however, the plesiosaurs have th^hind
limbs nearly or quite as large as the front ones, and they doubtless
were equally effective in function. The humerus and femur are
always elongate, though broad and massive. In no other aquatic
animals, save the marine turtles, do we find these bones relatively
Fig. 37. — Pelvic girdle of Elasmosaurus: p, pubis; is, ischium; il, ilium
so long and strong; they are very short in the cetaceans, the sire-
nians, the ichthyosaurs, mosasaurs, thalattosaurs, and the marine
crocodiles, in front at least. The strong muscular rugosities of
the plesiosaurian bones are very suggestive of powerful swimming
muscle^
""The bones of the forearms and legs, the wrists and ankles are
all polygonal platelets of bones, closely articulating with each other.
The finger and toe bones have a more elongated, hour-glass shape
than those of the ichthyosaurs, resembling more nearly those of the
SAUROPTERYGIA
8:
mosasaurs, indicating a greater flexil)ilit}' than the ichthyosaurs
possessed. The ichthyosaur paddles must have been quite Hke
the fins of fishes in function, while doubtless those of the j)lesiosaurs
were capable of a more varied use, as indeed was required of them.
Their articulation with the trunk was more of a ball-and-socket
7/f
Fig. 38. — Paddles of Plesiosaurs: A, right hind paddle of Thaiimaiosaurus, after
Fraas; B, right hind paddle of Trinacromerum; C, right front paddle of same indi-
vidual; /, femur; fb, fibula; t, tibia; h, humerus; r, radius; u, ulna.
joint than in the other reptiles, showing possibility of considerable
jotation on the long axis, and an antero-posterior propelling action.
The paddles were certainly more powerful than those of any other
aquatic air-breathing animals. There were no additional digits,
all plesiosaurs having neither more nor less than five in each hand
and foot. Hyperphalangy was sometimes carried to an excessive
86
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
degree, some digits of some species having as many as twenty-four
bones, a larger number than has been observed in any other air-
breathing vertebrate.
In Fig. 38 on p. 85 are shown two paddles, the front and
hind paddles of a single individual of a very specialized ple-
siosaur from the Upper Cretaceous of Kansas {Trinacromerum).
The long arm and thigh bones are followed by remarkably short and
SAVRO PTERYGIA
87
broad bones in place of the elongated forearm and leg bones of the
land reptiles. Not only are these bones much broader than they
are long, but there have been developed additional bones back of
them in the same row — new bones which have no counterpart in
any terrestrial reptiles. In the first of the three figures is sh(jwn
a hind paddle of one of the earliest known plesiosaurs, Thauma-
losaurus, from the lower part of the Jurassic of Germany. It will
be seen here that the tibia and fibula are much more elongated than
in Trinacromerum, and much more like the leg bones of land reptiles.
A still more primitive stage in the evolution of the swimming paddle
of the plesiosaurs will be seen in Fig. 48 on p. 99, the possibly
ancestral, amphibious nothosaur. Here the tibia and fibula, while
relatively very much shorter than in any land reptile, still have,
together with all the other
bones of the leg, a terrestrial
or amphibious type. In Fig.
39 is seen the front paddles
of the long-necked Elasmo-
saurus, which, though one of
the latest of all plesiosaurs in
geological history, has the
structure of its paddles some-
what intermediate between
that of the earlier Plcsiosaurus and the later Trinacromerum.
The skull of the long-necked plesiosaurs is surprisingly small
in comparison with the remainder of the skeleton, often very
snake-hke in shape, though very un-snake-like in structure. The
short-necked plesiosaurs had often a relatively larger skull, in Plio-
saurus, for instance, more than five feet long, sometimes rather
broad and short, sometimes remarkably long and slender. The
external nostrils were situated far back, very near the eyes, and
were very small. The eyes, of considerable size, though by no
means so large as those of the ichthyosaurs, were directed laterally,
and were provided with a ring of bony sclerotic plates — rather
small and weak ones, however. The quadrate bones — bones pecu-
liar to the reptiles and birds — to which the lower jaws are articu-
lated, are, as in the ichthyosaurs and crocodiles, rigidl}- li\ed and
Fig. 40. — Skull of Elasmosannis
side: pm. |)remaxilla; ;w, maxilla;
orbital; j, jugal.
from the
/><;, jiost-
/
88
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
immovable. The lower jaws, always rather slender, are firmly
united in front, sometimes for a long distance, as in the modern
gavials. The teeth of the broad-headed plesiosaurs are long,
slender, pointed, and recurved, of a murderously cruel shape; they
are deeply implanted in sockets, and number from twenty to
thirty on each jaw above and below. There are no teeth on the
bones of the palate, such as the mosasaurs possessed. The slender-
jawed, gavial-hke plesiosaurs have more numerous, but smaller
teeth. The surface of the skull on each side behind, for the attach-
ment of the muscles closing the mandibles, is of great extent; in
some this surface is increased by a high, thin crest in the middle,
as in strongly carnivorous animals, all of which give conclusive
evidence of the powerful muscles used in biting and seizing. There
is but one temporal opening on each side, as in the ichthyosaurs
Fig. 41. — Skull of Trinacromcrum from the side: ang, angular; d. dentary; pm.
premaxilla; po, postorbital; j, jugal; sur, surangular.
and the mosasaurs, whereas the crocodiles, thalattosaurs, phyto-
saurs, etc., have two. The brain cavity of all plesiosaurs is small,
though the cavities of the internal ears, the semicircular canals at
least, are large. The semicircular canals in vertebrates have little
or nothing to do with the function of hearing; they serve rather for
equilibration, for the co-ordination of muscular movement; possi-
bly we may infer from their large size in the plesiosaurs that they
were not at all clumsy in their movements. There is a large open-
ing for the pineal body, the so-called eye in the roof of the brain
cavity, though its possession does not necessarily imply the pos-
session of a functional organ.
The Plesiosauria included some of the largest aquatic reptiles
that have ever existed, equaled, perhaps, though not exceeded,
by some of the extinct crocodiles. The largest known are probably
SAL RO PTERYGIA
89
those of the Kansas chalk, or tlu' Jurassic of W'yominj^, which
proba])ly reached a length of nearly or ([uite fifty feet, of which the
neck formed al^out one-half. Some of them had paddles more than
six feet in length. The head of the largest was aijout live feet in
length, or about the size of that of the largest known ichthyosaurs
and mosasaurs. The smallest known adult plesiosaurs were nearly
ten feet in length. The teeth of the largest and most carnivorous
plesiosaurs sometimes measure four inches in length.
As is the case with both the ichthyosaurs and mosasaurs,
skeletons^ pfjpjesi^saurs have been discovered with nearly all their
Fig. 42. — Restoration of Trinacromcrum, a Cretaceous plesiosaur; lcnj;th about
ten feet.
bones in their relative positions, and with impressions of skin and
outUnes of body made before decomposition. Though our knowl-
edge of the external appearance of the plesiosaurs when ahve is
perhaps not as full as we could wish, it is suilticient to give us a fairly
good conception of what the animals really were. The skin was
smooth and bare, without scales or plates of any kind, and Dames
has described a terminal or nearly terminal fleshy dilatation of the
tail, forming a sort of caudal tin, which may have aided as a steering
apparatus. Mounted skeletons are preserved in a few museums,
notably the British Museum, the American Museum of New York
City, and the museum of the University of Kansas. Many nearly
90 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
complete skeletons, however, preserved as they were found in the
matrix, are shown in various museums.
With these ])rincipal facts regarding the structure, size, and
external form of these animals we may venture to draw certain
conclusions, or at least to offer certain conjectures as to their habits
in life.
Because of the rigid structjJT'e of the jaws, united in^ont and
incapable of any lateral movement posteriorly, quite as are the
jaws of crocodiles, we are sure that prey of any considerable size
could not have been swallowed whole. The crocodiles tear away
portions of the flesh of their victims by quick, powerful jerks, and
it is very probable that the flat-headed plesiosaurs tore their food
..a^part in the same manner. In these kinds the teeth are much
larger and more irregular in size than are those of the long-snouted
plesiosaurs. and their use was certainly as much for tearing as
for seizing. There are the same differences between the size of
the head and the size of the teeth among the various plesiosaurs
that there are among the modern crocodiles and gavials. While
the crocodiles seize and destroy even larger prey, drowning and
tearing their victims to pieces, the gavials are more exclusively
fish-eating, for which their small, sharp, and more numerous teeth
especially fit them. Their food, of small size, is swallowed entire,
and they are comparatively harmless, so far as animals of consid-
erable size are concerned.
The long neck, the thickset body, and short, stout tail are nqt_
at all what we should expect to find in quick-swimming animals.
We may therefore assume that the motions of the plesiosaurs
through the water were more turtle-like than fish-like. The tail,
even though provided with a terminal, lin-like dilatation, was of
little use in the propulsion of the bod)-, since the range of its move-
ments was restricted ; it possibly served in a measure as a steering
organ, a rudder. The large, freely movable paddles must have
been effective organs of locomotion, and this function accounts for
the relatively large size of the posterior pair, and the firm union of
the pelvis with the. vertebral column through the sacrum. With
the hind limbs used as oar-like organs, a firmer union with the
skeleton was required than the soft yielding flesh would permit.
SAURO PTERYGIA
91
At the same time this union was Hgamentous only, not bony and
unyielding, since the limbs were never used to support the bofly
upon the ground; and it is of interest to observe that the ilia are
directed, not upward and forward, but upward and backward to
the sternum, precisely the position that would be expected with the
force or thrust coming from behind, and not below the yielding
ligaments. Were the tail longer and more powerful, the hind limbs
would have been smaller and weaker, of use chiefly in equilibration,
involving the loss of any connection with the vertebral column and
the disappearance of the sacrum. It is of interest, ftnally, to
observe that many of the slender-jawed plesiosaurs had a relatively
short neck; they were doubtless more distinctively fish-eating in
habit, and possessed greater speed. That the limbs of plesiosaurs
were powerful propelling organs is also conclusively proved by their
structure. Quite unhke all those animals whose locomotion in the
water is chiefly effected by the tail, the humeri and femora, the
upper arm and thigh bones were elongated, and not shortened.
They form the rigid and stout handles of oars whose blades are the
thinner, flexible forearm, wrist, and fingers, or the corresponding
foreleg, ankle, and toes. No other purely aquatic reptiles, save
the turtles, which likewise are of the oar-propelled type, have
elongated arm and thigh bones.
Textbook illustrations of the plesiosaurs usually depict the
necks, like those of the swans, freely curved, and a popular scientific
article in one of our chief magazines a few years ago depicted one of
them with the neck coiled like the body of a snake. One noted
paleontologist, indeed, not many years ago described the plesiosaurs
as resting on the bottom in shallow waters with the neck uplifted
above the surface viewing the waterscape! And when we con-
sider the fact that some species of the elasmosaurs had a neck not
less than twenty feet in length, such a flexible use of it would not
seem improbable. But the plesiosaurs 'did not and could not use
the neck in such ways. They swam with the neck and head, how-
_eYer.lQrig, directed in front, and freedom of movement was restricted
^linost wholly to the anterior part. The posterior part of the neck
was thick^and heavy, and could not have been moved upward or
downward to any considerable extent and not very much laterally.
92
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
Jp\ From all of which it seems evident that the plcsiosaurs caught their
prey by downward and lateral motions of their neck, rather than
by quick swimming.
Fig. 43. — Gastroliths and bones of an undetermined plesiosaur from llie Lower
Cretaceous of Kansas.
About thirty years ago, the late Professor Seeley, a well-known
English paleontologist who devoted much attention to the study
of these reptiles, found with the remains of a medium-sized plesio-
saur nearly a peck of smoothly polished, rounded, and siliceous
SAURO PTERYGIA
93
pebbles. He believed that their occurrence with the skeleton was
not accidental, but that they had been intentionally swallowed
by the animal when alive, and formed at its death a ])arl of its
stomach contents. Even earlier than this the same habit had been
noticed. Nearly at the same time that Seeley mentioned the
peculiar discovery he had made the present writer found several
specimens of plesiosaurs in the chalk of western Kansas with which
similar pebbles were associated, an account of which was given
soon afterward by the late Professor Mudge. Since then numerous
like discoveries have made it certain that the plesiosaurs usually, if
not always, swallowed such pebbles in considerable quantities, for
what purpose we do not yet feel sure; one can only hazard a guess.
The small size of the pebbles, or gastrohths, as they have been
called, a half-inch or less in diameter, found with skeletons of large
size, indicate much more complete digestion of the hard parts of
their food than is the case with many other reptiles; no solid sub-
stance of size could have passed out of the plesiosaur stomach, and
such is the case with the modern crocodiles, which have a like habit
of swallowing pebbles. That the plesiosaurs picked up these sili-
ceous pebbles, sometimes weighing a half-pound, accidentally with
their food is highly improbable; they surely had something to do
with their food habits. It is not at all unreasonable to suppose
that the plesiosaurs, because of their comparative sluggishness, fed
upon an\ thing of an animal nature, whether living or dead, which
came in their way; that carrion, squids, crustaceans, and fishes
were all equally acceptable; they were probably largely scavengers
of the old oceans. Barnum Brown found among the stomach
contents of a plesiosaur fragments of fish and pterodactyl bones,
and cephalopod shells. Gallinaceous birds, most of which have the
same pebble-swallowing habit, havea thick-walled muscular stomach
or gizzard, in which the pebbles serve as an aid in the trituration
of food. Modern crocodiles, with the same pebble-swallowing
habit, have a thick-walled muscular stomach, gizzard-like, though
of course not as large as in birds; and the same habit has been
noted by Des Longchamps in the ancient teleosaur crocodiles.
It is hardly possible yet to decide whether or not the plesiosaurs
were denizens of the open oceans for the most part, far from land.
94 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AXD PRESENT
That many of them were rovers is quite certain. With the skeleton
of a large plesiosaur found some years ago in western Kansas, there
were many siliceous pebbles which could have come only from the
shores of the old Cretaceous seas about the Black Hills, hundreds
of miles distant. Some of the pebbles are red quartzite. quite
identical with that of the bowlders brought to Kansas millions of
years later by the glacial drift from outcroppings near the northern
line of Iowa. The bones of plesiosaurs are often found in deposits
believed to be of deep-water origin. But they are also found in
Kansas associated with the remains of small turtles, flying reptiles,
and birds which could only have lived near the shores. Indeed,
their remains have often been found with those of strictly fresh-
water animals which had been brought down by the floods to the
seas. Their wide but rather sparse distribution in all kinds of
marine sediments would rather indicate that they were at home far
out in the tempestuous ocean or near the shores in protected bays,
though probably they preferred the shallow-water littoral regions.
One conclusion is quite justified: they were not gregarious, as were
the ichthyosaurs.
It is not certain that the plesiosaurs were viviparous, though
there are good reasons for the belief that they were. Remains of
two embryos were found years ago in England associated in such
a way that it is reasonable to suppose they were unhatched young,
though embryos have never yet been found associated with skele-
tons of adults, as have those of ichthyosaurs in numerous instances.
Bones of young, often quite young, plesiosaurs, are frequently
found in shallow-water deposits, and if the young were actually
born alive they must have swum freely in the open waters while
yet of very tender age. Rather singularly, however, the remains
of these young plesiosaurs always occur as isolated bones.
In geological range the plesiosaurs were very persistent, extend-
ing through nearly all the Mesozoic. They began their career as
fully evolved plesiosaurs, so far as we now know, near the close of
the Triassic period, and reached their culmination in the Upper
Cretaceous, but survived to the close of that period. In the begin-
ning of their career they were associated with the marine crocodiles
and the ichthyosaurs, but outlived them to find companions and
probably enemies in the huge and voracious mosasaurs of the later
SAURO PTERYGIA . 95
Cretaceous times. At no time do they appear to have been esj^eciall)-
numerous, nor does it seem probable that they were ever a domi-
nant type of marine vertebrate Hfe, though their remains occur
everywhere that marine deposits of the Jura and Cretaceous are
known. Indeed, it may be said with almost certainty that rocks ot
these ages and of that character everywhere in the world contain
fossil plesiosaurs. Their bones have been made known from
Europe, Asia, Africa, Austraha, and North and South America.
From North America thirty or more species have been described
from New Jersey, Alabama, Mississippi, Texas, Arkansas, Kansas,
Nebraska, Colorado, New Mexico, Wyoming, North and South
Dakota, California, etc.
The cause of their final extinction no one knows, nor can we
conjecture much about it with assurance. That climatic conditions
became unfavorable for them is highly improbable, considerinq;
their cosmopolitan habits; they were not discriminating in their
environments. After successfully withstanding their fiercest foes,
the ichthyosaurs, crocodiles, and mosasaurs, and large carnivorous
fishes, it does not seem probable that they would succumb to lesser
enemies, though it may be that they were finally attacked success-
fully, not in the fulness of their strength as adults, but while young,
by more insidious enemies. More probably after their long life of
millions of years they had grown old, as everything grows old, and
had become so fixed and unplastic in their structure and habits
that even slight causes were at last their undoing. When we shall
have bridged over that still imperfectly known transition period
between the great Age of Reptiles and the greater Age of Mammals
we shall have learned more definitely some of the causes of the
extraordinary revolution in vertebrate life that then occurred.
The plesiosaurs went out with nearly all of their kind, the mosa-
saurs, the pterodactyls, the dinosaurs; and, so far as we now know,
their places in the sea, land, and air were not immediately taken
by any other creatures.
NOTHOSAURIA
A few years after the discovery of the plesiosaurs by Conybeare,
the remains of animals of allied kinds were found in the Triassic
rocks of^ Bavaria. At first they were supp^ed~to' T)e those of true
96
U .ITER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
c
o
a
rt
Ti
u
O
a
•^
s
SAURO PTERYGIA
97
plesiosaurs, and even the astute Cuvier was not very clear about
them. Cuvier was the first to call attention to them, expressing
the opinion that some of the fossils were of previously unknown
animals aUied to the crocodiles, lizards, and plesiosaurs. It was
von Meyeri_hpwever, who first introduced a nothosaur to the
scientific world under the name ConcJiiosaurus. A year later
Count George of Miinster described other forms~under the name
Nothosaurus, meaning "false lizard." Count von Miinster was a
most zealous collector of the fossils of the Triassic deposits of
Bavaria, amassing, after thirty years of active and enthusiastic
labor, a very large amount of material, which, at his death, was
purchased by the King of Bavaria and placed in the hands of von
Meyer for study. Von Meyer was to Germany what Owen was to
-iSSS
-~^r^
W
HHHHM^i^^.'- :.i'>]U:^.±<
Fig. 45. — Head and neck of Nothosaurus; photograph of specimen in the Sencken-
berg Museum, from Dr. Dreverman.
England, a man of deep learning, having an extensive knowledge
of comparative anatomy, and being thorough and critical in his
work. His descriptions and illustrations of these rich collections
made by von Miinster are masterpieces of scientific thoroughness.
He recognized in Nothosaurus and other allied forms from the
Bavarian Triassic a distinct group of semiaquatic reptiles allied to
the plesiosaurs, and his conclusions have never been gainsaid. In
more recent years additional remains of these animals from Bavaria
and other places in Europe have been described, but none are
known from other parts of the earth, or from other than Triassic
rocks. Altogether about ten genera and about twice as many
species have been described, probably all belonging in one famil}-,
and all by common consent now classified with the Sauropterygia.
98
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
V^V
J
The Nothosauria were much smaller reptiles than the plesio-
saurs, none of them perhaps exceeding the size of the smallest known
plesiosaurs. They were semiaquatic in habit, with many curious
resemblances to otht r
semiaquatic reptiles of
a later time known, as
the dolichosaurs. The
neck is more or less
elongated, having about
twenty vertebrae in the
longest-necked forms;
the body is moderately
long, and broad, and
the tail is relatively
^ shfixt^ The vertebrae
and ribs are quite like
those of the plesiosaurs,
that is, the yextjebrae
Fig. 46. — Pectoral girdle of Xolhosaurus, from
photograph by E. Fraas: /(7, interclavicle; cl,
clavicle; sc, scapula; cor, coracoid.
are gently concave at
each end, and the dorsal ribs are attached by a single head to ihe^
transverse process high up on the arch ; the cervical ribs are double-
headed, precisely like those of the older plesiosaurs, one of the char-
acters which insistently proves
the relationships of the two
groups. The bones of the shoul-
ders (Fig. 46) also have many
resemblances to the extraor-
dinary ones of the plesiosaurs,
though they are much less
specialized. There was no
sternum; the coracoids are
large, though very much
smaller than those of the plesi-
osaurs. The collar-bones are large and strong, joining each other
in front of the coracoids and firmh- united with the shoulder-
blades at the outer extremity. Four vertebrae are united to form
a sacrum, and their union with the hip bones (Fig. 47) was much
Fig. 47. — Pelvic bones of Xolhosaiint.'::
il. ilium; or, acetabulum; p, pubis; /.r,
ischium, (.\ftcr Andrews.)
SAUROPTERYGIA
99
v^ firmer than was the case with the plcsiosaurs. The Hmbs are
elongated, but it will be observed in the figures (Fig. 48) that the
radius and ulna, tibia and fibula, that is, the bones of the forearm
and of the leg proper, are relatively very short as compared with
the humerus and femur, a sure indication of the beginning of
aquatic habits. The toes and fingers were doubtless webbed, anrl
there was no increase in the num-
bers of bones in the digits, so
conspicuous in — the plesiosaurs.
The exteriial nostrils are large, but
are not situated so far back near
the eyes as in the plesiosaurs.
There js a large pineal opening in
the_t02J)f the skull, as in the plesi-
osaurs, but no sclerotic or bony
plates have been observed in the
eyes. They had ventral ribs like
those of the plesiosaurs.
No impressions of scales or
bony plates have ever been found
with the remains of the notho-
saurs, and it is the belief that the
■ — skin Was bare. A good idea of
their general appearance wall be
gained from the accompanying
restoration adapted from that of
Professor Fraas (Fig. 44) and the
restoration of the less highly
specialized Lariosaurus , made
from a very complete skeleton in
" 1 WW \W.
Fig. 48. — Legs of Lariosaurus bal-
,s(/w/. an Upper Triassic nothosaur: /;,
humerus; r. radius; ii, ulna; /, inter-
medium; itc, ulnare; /, femur; //,
fibula; /, tibia; a, astragalus; c. cal-
caneum. (After Abel.)
the Frankfort museum (Fig. 49).
It has been thought that these nothosaurs, so intermediate in
structure between the true plesiosaurs and land reptiles, were the
actual ancestors, but this is rather doubtful. It is probable that
they were only very closely akin to the real ancestors, since in some
ways they had become specialized too much, and, as we have
already explained, highly specialized characters or organs can nc\er
IOC WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
Ji
I'iG. 49. — Lariosaurus balsami
SA UROPTER YGIA i o i
go back to their earlier condition. The nothosaurs do prove
beyond all possibility of doubt that the plesiosaars were at least
the descendants of animals closely allied to them, so closely, indeed,
that it is doubtful whether we could distinguish external differences
were all of them actually living at the present time.
We have repeatedly seen that all aquatic animals have some
or all the bones of the limbs shortened, and it is of interest to
observe that the early plesiosaurs had longer forearm and foreleg
bones than the later ones, just as we have seen was the case with the
early ichthyosaurs. It would seem probable that all the early
plesiosaurs had long necks, though some of the late ones in Cre-
taceous times had relatively short necks, shorter even than the
known nothosaurs possessed.
The nothosaurs doubtless lived about the shores of the ancient
seas, spending much of their time in the water, leaving it perhaps
when hard pressed by their enemies, as do some modern reptiles,
or to rear their young. The teeth of_ the nothosaurs are long
and slender in front, shorter behind. The animals must therefore
have been carnivorous in habit, feeding probably upon such fishes
as they could catch, and the various invertebrates which live in f)
shallow water. The structure of the jaws and their attachments
ai£_(jttite-^s^in tlie_p.lesiosaurs, proviiig that tBey could not have
swallowed large objects; but the skull is broader and flatter than
that of most-plesiosaurs, indicating habits not unlike those of the
modern aUigators and crocodiles.
Some time we shall doubtless find remains of nothosaurs or
nearly aUied animals elsewhere than in Europe, but probably not
from later deposits than the Triassic. So far as we now know, their
geological range and geographical distribution were much restricted;
they evidently wholly died out shortly after the plesiosaurs appeared
/■
CHAPTER VII
ANOMODONTIA
LYSTROSAURUS
• Over a large area of South Africa, chiefly along the Orange
River and its tributaries, there is an extensive series of deposits
many hundreds of feet in thickness, usually called the Karoo beds,
which, for more than fifty years, have been widely famous among
scientific men for the many and remarkable vertebrate fossils
which they have yielded. These deposits seem to represent the
whole of the vast interval of time from the Carboniferous to the
Jurassic, that is, the whole of the Permian and Triassic, though
not many fossils have been found in the lowermost strata. Among
the fossils of the lower strata are those of the strange creatures
described in the following pages as Mesosauriis. From the deposits
representing the Upper Permian and the Triassic the fossils that
have been obtained are both abundant and diverse. Unfortu-
nately, however, of the scores of forms that have been discovered
few are known completely, and still fewer are known sufficiently
well to enable us to picture the living animals.
From the Upper Permian Karoo rocks two orders of reptiles
have been recognized, the Cotylosauria, represented by more
specialized forms than those from the Lower Permian of North
America; and the order or group called by Broom the Therapsida.
While the forms of this latter group have certain definite structural
relationships with each other, they show so great a diversity among
themselves that, when they shall be better known, it will be
found necessary perhaps to separate them into several distinct
orders.
At least five groups of the Therapsida arc now recognized by
Broom, the Dromasauria, Dinocephalia, Anomodontia, Thero-
cephalia, and Theriodontia. Of all these the members of the
last-mentioned group have attracted the greatest interest among
I02
ANOMODONriA
i<^3
geologists and naturalists, because of their intimate relationshi[)s to
the mammals — so intimate, indeed, that they seem almost to bridge
over the interval between the two classes. From higher Karoo
beds primitive representatives of the more crocodilian types have
been discovered, forms which seem to be the beginning of that
order described on later pages as the Parasuchia.
It would lead us too far astray to mention even, let alone
describe, the many forms of reptiles that have been discovered
in the Karoo beds; nor indeed is it possible for anyone who
has not attentively studied their remains to get a very clear con-
ception of many of them, so incompletely have they been made
known.
Doubtless from among all these diverse forms there have been
not a few which sought wider opportunities in the water, but, if so,
we have as yet very little knowledge of them. One form only, so far
as the writer is aware, has been credited with aquatic habits, a
remarkable reptile belonging to the group originally called by
Sir Richard Owen, the Anomodontia, a word meaning ''lawless
teeth," and to the genus Lystrosaurus, also described by the same
noted paleontologist. A restoration of the skeleton of Lystro-
sauriis has recently been published by Watson. This restoration
the writer has reproduced in the present pages, though he has
taken the liberty of making some minor changes, to accord better
with what he believes must have been the position of the shoulder-
blades and the hind legs. And he would also suggest that the tail
in life did not turn down so much at its extremity as depicted by
Watson.
Both Broom and Watson believe that this animal was a power-
ful swimmer, and thoroughly aquatic in habit. To the present
writer, however, this does not seem so evident. He is rather
inclined to believe that the creature was chiefly terrestrial in habit,
living probably in marshy regions, and perhaps seeking its food
in shallow waters and in the mud. Aside from the position of the
nostrils, which it will be observed are rather close to the eyes,
a position so characteristic of many swimming reptiles and mam-
mals, there is but little indication of aquatic adaptations elsewhere
in the skeleton.
I04 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
ANOMODONTIA 105
The skull is of most extraordinary form. The lace is turned
downward, leavin' which at one time had many adherents among scholars.
He beheved that the spawn of fishes or the eggs of other
creatures had been carried up from the seas and lands in moist
vapors into the clouds, whence they had descended in rain,
penetrating the earth to give origin to the fossils; in other
words, he believed that all fossils grew in the earth from germs
of the living animals that inhabited the land and seas. Certainly
the old ])hilosophers were hard driven to make facts agree with
theories !
no WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
Remains of ichthyosaurs, abundant as they were and are in
many deposits in England and German}-, attracted very little
attention from the naturalists of the eighteenth century after the
time of Scheuchzer and Baier, and nothing more was written about
them until 1814, when Sir Everard Home, an English comparative
anatomist, in an extensive series of large and finely illustrated,
though rather discursive, works, described and figured a number
of good specimens. To the animal the remains of which he rather
vagueh' and imperfectly described, he gave in 1819 the name
Proteosaurus, in the beHef that it was allied to the living Proteus,
a salamander.
In 182 1 the curator of mineralogy of the British Museum —
Koenig by name — after a more critical study of other remains,
reached the conclusion that these animals were intermediate be-
tween the fishes and the reptiles, and gave to them the generic
name Ichthyosaurus, meaning fish-reptile, a name by which the
chief forms have ever since been known. Within the next few
years many specimens of ichthyosaurs were carefully and fully
described by Conybeare, Cuvier, Owen, and others of England,
France, and Germany, making very clear all the more important
details of their skeletal structure. Blaineville, in 1835, thought
that the ichthyosaurs constituted a distinct class of vertebrates
equivalent to all other reptiles, the birds, and the mammals, which
he called Ichthyosauria, the first appearance in literature of the
name by which the order is properly known. Five years later,
however, the famous English anatomist and paleontologist, the late
Sir Richard Owen, united the ichthyosaurs with the plesiosaurs
as a single order of reptiles, to which he gave the name Enalio-
sauria, meaning sea-reptiles, a name which has long been current
in textbooks and general works on natural history. Moreover,
Owen rather arbitrarily changed Blaineville's name Ichthyosauria
to Ichthyopterygia, a name which is often, though incorrectly,
used to designate this order of reptiles. These briefly given and
perhaps dry details will make clear how necessary is that rule of
priority uppn which naturalists so often insist. When anyone may
change the names of organisms at will there will be no stability
and no uniformity, because there is no one to decide, and the pres-
ICHTHYOSAURI A ,i,
tige of a great name, like that of Owen, will carry authorits- till
someone else with greater authority appears. Whether or not the
name Protcosaurus, first given to any member of this order, should
take precedence over the later Ichthyosaurus is still in doubt, since
Home gave no specific name to his species, and the very particular
purists of modern times have decided that a genus is not named
unless the species is also! We moderns sometimes are inclined
to impose very stringent conditions upon the older naturalists;
let us hope that we shall be treated more leniently by the future
naturalists!
It will lead us too far astray to follow in detail the history of
the further discoveries of the ichthyosaurs during the early part of
the nineteenth century. It may briefly be said, only, that no
other group of. extinct backboned animals excited more interest
among scientific men. One incident will suffice. More than sixty
years ago, an interesting deduction as to the living form of the
ichthyosaurs was made by Sir Richard Owen. He observed that
many of the known skeletons, as they were found in their rocky
matrix, had a remarkable dislocation of the vertebrae at a cer-
tain place near the end of the tail, and, although such an append-
age was quite unknown in other reptiles either living or extinct,
concluded that the living animals had a terminal, horizontal,
fleshy fin, very much like that of the whales and sirenians. Sure
enough, discoveries made forty years later disclosed impressions in
the rocks, not only of a large caudal fin, but also of a dorsal fin, as
well as outlines of the flesh-covered paddles. The dislocation of
the vertebrae at the place where the fleshy fin joined the more
slender tail was due to the action of currents of water, or simple
gravitation, upon a thin vertical fin and not, as Owen supposed,
to the twisting of the terminal part as it fell to a horizontal position
after partial decomposition of the soft parts.
About twenty-five years ago, Professor E. Fraas, the present
director of the Stuttgart Museum, described and figured very fully,
not only specimens showing impressions of the fins and paddles,
but also others of well-preserved and very complete skeletons of
dift"erent species of ichthyosaurs from the Jurassic deposits of
Wiirtemberg, in which remains of these animals occur in great
112 U .ITER REPTILES OF THE PAST AXD PRESENT
profusion. His researches, and those of sev^eral authors since then,
supplementing and confirming or disproving those of the many
observers made during the preceding seventy years, have finally
determined almost perfectly the complete structure of the more
typical ichthyosaurs, enabling us to infer not a little as to their
habits and distribution in the old Jurassic oceans. Within the
past few years the discoveries of Professor J. C. Merriam of Cali-
fornia have likewise added greatly to our knowledge of the earUer
ichthyosaurs. It may now truthfully be said that of no group of
extinct reptiles do we have a more complete and satisfactory knowl-
edge than of the ichthyosaurs.
Nevertheless we have yet very much more to learn about the
order Ichthyosauria as a whole — whence they came and how they
Fig. 52. — Ichthyosaurus quadricissus. Photograph of specimen in Senckenberg
museum, from Dr. Dreverman.
originated; what their nearest kin were among other reptiles; and
especially, more about the connecting links between them and
terrestrial reptiles. They have, as an order, so isolated a position,
are so widely separated from all other reptiles in structure, that they
have long been a puzzle to paleontologists. Like the whales and
other cetaceans among mammals, we know the ichthyosaurs well
in the plenitude of their power and the fulness of their development,
but have yet only an imperfect knowledge of their earlier history,
and none whatever of their earliest. However, as will be seen
farther on, the recent discoveries by Merriam have shed much hght
on some of the stages of their evolution. So nearly perfectly were
all the later ichthyosaurs adapted to their life in the water that it
was believed by nearly all paleontologists until about a score of years
ICUTUYOSM RIA
1^3
ago that they had descended directly from fishes. But this l)eHef
has been quite abandoned by all, not only because the recent dis-
coveries of the earlier ichthyosaurs have demonstrated a positive
increase in the aquatic adaptations of the later forms, but also
Fig. 53. — Baptanodon {Ophlhalmosaurus). Skull from the side, from above, and
from below (after Gilmore) : awg, angular; Z)5, basisphenoid; , palatine; pa,
parietal; pm, premaxilla; po, postorbital; ps, parasphenoid; pt, ptcrj-goid; />/, pre-
frontal; sa, surangular; sp, splenial; sq, squamosal; si, supratemporal; q, quadrate;
qj, quadratojugal.
because a double origin of any type of animal life is quite out of
accord with all known facts and principles of paleontology. It is
quite possible for animals, in becoming adapted to peculiar environ-
mental and food conditions, to acquire certain rcscm]:)lances to
114
UATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
other animals, but quite impossible for them to acquire their actual
structure. The ichthyosaurs are true reptiles, and all reptiles
must have had a common origin.
We are sometimes in doubt, however, as to whether characters
resembling those of other animals are really acquired as adaptations
to peculiar environments, that is, parallel, convergent, or homo-
plastic characters, or whether they are due to heredity from remote
ancestors. The reptilian characters of the ichthyosaurs, however,
are so emphatic that they can only be ascribed to heredity. Ichthy-
osaurs are as truly reptilian
as crocodiles or snakes, not-
withstanding their fish-like
form and habits. The ich-
thyosaur ancestors were once
truly land reptiles — of that
we are as sure as we well
can be. Some have thought
that those ancestors were the
primitive Rhynchocephalia,
but most are now convinced
that they were among the
most primitive of reptiles, a
branch probably from the
cotylosaurs or cotylosaurian
ancestors. Probablv of all
the extinct forms that we
know the Proganosauria
come the nearest; indeed it
is not impossible that they may have been the actual forbears of
the ichthyosaurs.
The ichthyosaurs varied in length from two to thirty feet, but
the different species, especially all the later ones, resembled each
other pretty closely in shape; the beak was more slender in some
than in others, and the shapes of the fins and paddles varied not a
little, as we shall see. The jaws were long and slendet^ provided
with numerous rather small but sharp and recurved teeth, espe-
cially well fitted for the seizure and retention of slippery prey. The
Fig. 54. — Occiput of Bapianodon (Opli-
tlialmosaunis): pa, parietal; soc, supraoccip-
ital; sq, squamosal; exoc, exoccipital; op.o,
paroccipital; sta, stapes; st, supratemporal;
gi(, quadrate; qj, quadratojugal; pi, ptery-
goid; bs, basisphenoid; sag, surangular; ag,
angular; art, articular; pra. prcarticular.
(After Gilmore.)
ICIirilYUSM RIA 115
teeth were inserted, not in separate sockets, as are those of the
crocodiles and many other reptiles, but in long, deep grooves, and
were easily lost, indeed so easily lost that one late American form
was originally described as edentulous, and it was not till a number
of years had elapsed that the teeth were found. The nostrils
were small, and situated far back on the sides of the face, near the
eyes. The eyes were very large, not only in proportion to the size
of the skull, but, in the largest species, actually attaining in some,
perhaps, the size of a human head. The eyeball was surrounded
in front by an extraordinarily large and strong ring of ossifications
in the sclerotic membrane, giving not only protection to the eye
under the varying pressure of the water, but also greater control over
vision. The neck was very short, so short, in fact, that no con-
struction was visible in the living animal between the head and
body; it was capable of only slight movement. The trunk was
elongated and relatively slender, sometimes with more than fifty
vertebrae in it. The tail also was long and flattened, ending in all
the later species in a large fleshy fin, resembling 'the caudal fin of
many fishes in shape and doubtless also in function. There was
also a large dorsal fin, supported by hardened or calcified sinews,
in shape like the dorsal fin of most fishes and many cetaceans. This
character is absolutely unique among reptiles, so far as is known,
and was one of the extreme specializations of water life. The hind
limbs were smaller, often much smaller than the fore ones, and both
were quite fin-like in life, or rather flipper-like, though not at all
fin-like in structure. The skin was smooth and bare. In brief,
to quote Fraas's words:
The general aspect of the ichthyosaurs was very dolphin-like. The body
was everywhere naked and probably dark in color. The head was produced
in front into a long, slender snout, and was closely joined to the body posteriorly
without indications of a neck. The body itself was cylindrical, expanded
in front by the large thorax and abdomen, but rapidly diminishing into the
long, slender, and strong tail. Close behind the head were the front paddles,
which in some species were broad and shovel-like, in others elongated and
pointed. The hind paddles were smaller than the front ones, sometimes greatly
reduced in size, their function replaced by that of the very broad tail.
From the foregoing descriptions and the restoration shown
in Fig. 51, we see how very fish-like, or rather dolphin-like, these
Il6 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
animals were in the external form — so fish-like that the name Ich-
thyosaurus is not misleading, though Koenig gave it in the mistaken
belief that they were really allied to the fishes. When to these
external features certain other fish-like details of the skeleton are
added, we do not wonder that the early observers were so long in
doubt about them. A more careful examination of the skeleton
will, however, disclose so many truly reptilian characters that their
external appearance and habits lose all significance.
The vertebrae are deeply biconcave and fish-like, it is true, but
a consideration of the reasons therefor will convince us that any
other kind of vertebrae would be more remarkable. At the time
when the ichthyosaurs must have originated, at the time when the
first known ichthyosaurs appeared in geological history indeed, all
reptiles had biconcave vertebrae, aad for the most part at least
deeply biconcave ones. The vertebrae remained fish-like through-
out all their history, perpetuating their type until most other rep-
tiles had developed a firmer one, because such vertebrae were best
adapted for the quick, pliant movements of the spinal column so
necessary for the well-being of the animals in the water. In the
modern dolphins, animals in shape, size, and habits most wonder-
fully allied to what these old reptiles must have been, the small, flat-
ended vertebrae are widely separated by disks of flexible cartilage.
Not only were their vertebrae fish-like in form, but there are
other characters in the spinal column of a primitive or generalized
nature. As in all aquatic animals, the articulating processes
between the vertebrae are either weak or wanting in the posterior
part of the column. And they were not only small, but were situ-
ated, in many, high up, very remarkably resembhng the pecuHar
arrangement of the articulations in the dolphins.
There is no sacrum, that is, there were no united vertebrae pos-
teriorly for the attachment and support of the pelvis, as no such
support was needed. In only one other group of aquatic reptiles
was the sacrum lost, though it has wholly disappeared in the ceta-
ceans and sirenians among mammals. The chevron bones of the
tail, usually bony arches on the under side of the tail for the pro-
tection of the blood-vessels, in crawling reptiles, were very imper-
fectly developed in the later forms, though normal in shape in the
early ones. The ribs are numerous, long, and slender, very much
ICHTHYOSAURI A
117
resembling those of the fish-eating (l()li)hins. 'I1u'\ usualK- IkkI.
however, two attachments to the body of the vertebra and none to
the arch, chlTering in this respect from all other animals.
Of the shoulder bones, the scapula or shoulder-blade, as usual
among water animals, is short and broad. In the place of a sternum
the coracoids joined each other broadly in the middle, just as they
did in the oldest known land reptiles. And there were clavicles
and an interclavicle. Below the abdomen behind were numerous
slender bones called ventral ribs. The pelvis is very weak, and
was suspended below the spinal column in the fleshy walls of the
abdomen. The hind legs were so small that little support was
Fig. 55. — Pectoral girdle of Baplanodon {0 phthalmosaurus) , an .American Upper
Jurassic ichthyosaur. (After Gilmore.)
necessary for them, and, because they were not used either for the
support of the body or for propulsion, they did not require a firm
union with the skeleton. Doubtless had the ichthyosaurs con-
tinued to the present time, they would have lost entirely the hind
legs, as have the cetaceans.
It is in the limbs that most extraordinary differences from all
other animals are seen. So great are these dift'erences that it has
been a puzzle to naturalists to understand how they could have
arisen. In no other animals above the fishes, that is, in no other
reptiles, in no amphibians, birds, or mammals, are there ever more
than five fingers or five toes, the number with which air-breathing
animals began. Fingers and toes may be lost and often are lost
in all groups of life, until a single one in each limb may remain, as
in the domestic horse. An increase of fingers and toes, however,
seems to be an impossibility in evolution, and doubtless of real
ii8
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
fingers and toes it is an equal impossibility. All naturalists are now
agreed that a specialized character can never revert to a generahzed
condition, or rather to a generalized structure, that an organ once
functionally lost can never be regained by descendants. A char-
acter once lost is lost foreover; horses of the future can never have
more than one finger or one toe in each Hmb.
Fig. 56. — Front paddle of Oph-
thalmosaiirus (after Andrews): //,
humerus; r, radius; u, ulna; p,
pisiform; re, radiale; iiil, inter-
medium; ue, ulnare.
Fig. 57. — Front paddle of Mer-
riamia, a Triassic ichthyosaur.
(After Merriam.) Explanations
as in Fig. 56.
And there was an increase in the ichthyosaurs, in some not
only of the number of digits in each limb, but in all of the number
of bones in each digit, a character found also in the unrelated
mosasaurs and plesiosaurs. This increase in linger and toe bones,
or hyperphalangy as it is called, is one of the most peculiar of all
the adaptations to water life, changing the feet and hands from
the ordinary walking type to the fish-like swimming type. The
bones beyond the humerus and femur in the ichthyosaurs were so
ICHTHYOSAURI A 119
increased in number and so changed in form and relations that
they bear little resemblance to the corresponding bones of other
reptiles. They are merely polygonal platelets of bone, articulating
on all sides and fitting closely together, pcrniitting flexibility, but
not much else.
It is now believed that the increase, not onl\' of additional
digits, sometimes to as many as ten in each hand and foot, but of
the finger and toe bones as well, was the result of a sort of vegetative
reproduction. The margins and ends of the flippers were doubtless
hardened by cartilage or fibrous material, and because of the action
of the limbs this cartilagenous material broke up into nodules each
of which took on ossification finally. Among the whales, where
hyperphalangy also occurs, though to a less extent, it has been
thought that the increase in number has been due simply to the
ossification of the parts of each bone normally present, that is, to
the epiphyses, which became separated from the shaft of each bone.
But this explanation will hardly suffice for the fingers and toes of
the plesiosaurs and ichthyosaurs, for there are altogether too many
such ossifications; and besides, the bones in these animals, as in
most reptiles, did not have epiphyses, or terminal separate ossifica-
tions of the bones of the skeleton.
It will be observed from the figures that the arm and thigh
bones of Ichthyosaurus are very much shortened — a striking adapta-
tion to water life, so conspicuously seen in the modern whales
and dolphins as well as in the mosasaurs, thalattosaurs, etc. So
characteristic indeed is this shortening that, were every other bone
of the skeleton of an ichthyosaur unknown save the humerus or
femur, it would be quite certain from these alone that the animal
was thoroughly aquatic in habit.
About sixty years ago a rather aberrant form of ichthyosaur.
now known as Mixosaurus, was discovered in rocks of Triassic age.
that is, of much greater age than any ichthyosaurs previously found,
in which not only the forearm but also the lower leg bones were
longer, resembling more the corresponding bones of land animals.
It was from the examination of specimens in 1887 of these mixo-
saurs that the late Professor Baur became convinced that the
ichthyosaurs were the descendants of land reptiles, and not directly
I20 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
of the fishes as they were universally thought to have been at that
time. As Professor Baur very pertinently said, if the ichthyosaurs
were descended from the fishes directly, the earliest forms should
be more nearly like the fishes than the later ones, whereas just the
opposite was the real fact. The arguments which he gave in sup-
port of his contention were so convincing that they found imme-
diate acceptance among all naturalists. Fortunately within the
past fifteen years many other remains of early ichthyosaurs from
the Triassic rocks of California have been brought to light by Pro-
fessor Merriam, remains which throw a flood of light upon the early,
though not the earliest, history of these strange reptiles. He has
recognized among the forms he has discovered, not only new
species, but several new genera, and perhaps new families of ichthyo-
saurs. His studies have demonstrated so well the stages of evolu-
tion between the early ichthyosaurs and the later ones in their
progressive adaptation to water fife that it will be of interest to
summarize them here.
In the early ichthyosaurs locomotion was largely by the aid of
the limbs; in the later ones almost exclusively by the aid of the
caudal fin. In the former the paddles were larger and the bones
longer, more like those of land animals; in the latter they were rela-
tively smaller and shorter, and more fin-like. In the digits of the
early forms the finger and toe bones were more elongated and fewer
in number. The hind limbs were nearly as large as the front ones
in the Triassic, often very much smaller in the later ichthyosaurs;
and the increased number of digits occurs only in the later forms.
In the Triassic ichthyosaurs, all classed in the family MLxo-
sauridae, the pelvis was larger and more firmly connected with the
body than in the later forms.
The skull of the early forms was relatively shorter, as com-
pared with the trunk, the jaws shorter as compared with the head,
the eyes were relatively small, the teeth in some less numerous, and
set in distinct sockets like those of land reptiles; the vertebrae
were relatively longer and less fish-like, and their articulations more
like those of land reptiles.
The distal part of the tail was not bent downward so sharply,
that is, the terminal fin was smaller, or the tail mav have been
ICIITIIYOSAURIA
121
simply flattened near its end and not really fin-like. The scapula
was longer and less fan-like in shape.
And all these are remarkable evidences of an increased adapta-
tion to water life in the more recent ichthyosaurs over the older
ones. Were someone now so fortunate as to find ichthyosaurs in
late Permian rocks, we should doubtless have the nearly complete
chain between the most highly specialized type of water reptiles
and their terrestrial ancestors.
From the structure of the skeleton alone the early observers
were justified in inferring much concerning the shape and habits
of the li\ing ichthyosaurs. Later discoveries have added so many
Fig. 58.— Caudal fin of Ichthyosaurus, after Bauer (left figure); caudal fin of
Mixosaurus, after Wiman (right figure).
definite facts that, at the present time, we know more about their
habits than we do of any other extinct reptiles. In various places
in England and Germany, especially in Wiirtemberg, the remains
of ichthyosaurs are found in extraordinary abundance and perfec-
tion, not only whole skeletons lying in the positions which they had
assumed after the decomposition of their bodies, but also often the
actual remains, carbonized, of the skin, muscles, and ligaments, as
well as delicate impressions of external parts. Many of these
skeletons are obtained from the numerous stone quarries, where
they are a sort of "by-product," the sums received for them
adding not a little to the income of the quarrymen. So many are
obtained in this and other ways that specimens of ichthyosaurs
122
WATER REPTILES OF THE FAST AXD FRESENT
are perhaps more frequently seen in the museums of the world
than those of any other extinct backboned animal. Fairly com-
plete skeletons may now be purchased of dealers in such things for
from fifty to seventy-five dollars. As may be supposed, the best
and most complete collections of these fossil remains are those of
the British Museum in London and the museum in Stuttgart.
From a study of those of the last-mentioned museum Professor
Fraas has learned many interesting facts and reached many inter-
esting conclusions regarding the life-habits of the ichthyosaurs.
In the accompanying figure (Fig. 59) is shown a photographic
reproduction of a very complete specimen, in which not only is
the outline of the whole body shown, but also much of the carbon-
ized remains of the muscles and skin has been detected.
Fio. 5Q. — Ichlhyosaiinis qiiadricissus. (From a phoiogruph from B. Hauff,
Paleontologisches Atelier, Holzmaden.)
The attachment of the paddles to the body was broad antero-
posteriorly, proving conclusively that they could not have been
much used in propulsion, either in the water or upon land, since
such use would require a fore-and-aft movement, and a consequent
twisting or rotation of the whole arm or leg, which, because of the
broad attachment, must have been very difficult, if not impossible.
Microscopic examination of the remains of skin preserved dis-
closed an abundance of dark pigment, indicating. Professor Fraas
believes, that the skin was dark colored above. Doubtless, also,
the under side, as in nearl}- all swimming animals of the present
time, was of a lighter color, because such coloration rendered the
animals much less conspicuous in the water when seen either from
above or below. That the skin was bare is proved by many impres-
KII I UVOSAL RIA 123
sions or molds of it that have been discovered in the rocks, in which
man)' fine creases are seen, but nothinjf suj^gesting scales or bony
plates, save on the front e(l. willi
the knee flexed and the feet turned outward and expanded. 'I'he
legs of the proganosaurs doubtless were used in the same way. as
shown in the restoration, which has been modified from the original
of Dr. McGregor in accordance with this probable use of the legs.
There seems to be an incongruity between the posterior nostrils
and the heavy flat ribs, the former suggesting free swimming and
diving habits, the latter shallow-water and bottom habits. Possibly
.the position of the nostrils has been the result of the great elonga-
tion of the face in front of the nostrils; and we know that their
posterior position in the phytosaurs (Figs. 95 and 96) has not been
due to swimming habits only.
Nothing has been discovered to indicate the nature of the
external covering of the body. Possibly, even probably, the skin
was more or less covered by horny scales or plates, though it ma\-
have been quite bare, as in the salamanders.
To which other reptiles the proganosaurs are nearest related
has long been a subject of dispute, and still is. The more
probable view, however, is that they were a very early branch of
the most primitive stock of reptiles, the Cotylosauria, one that
soon perished, leaving no descendants, unless possibly the ichthyo-
saurs were their progeny. Some writers have thought that the>-
were the early ancestral stock of the plesiosaurs, and they are often
classified with the Sauropterygia. Stfll others have believed that
they were an early side-branch of the great group of Rhynchoce-
phalia. And this doubt has been chiefly due to our imperfect knowl-
edge of the bones of the cranium. As has been explained, very
much stress in the classification of reptiles has been laid by students
on the possession of one, two, or no openings on the side of the
skull back of the eyes. And this part of the skull of the Progano-
sauria has not yet been satisfactorily made out. Dr. McGregor
thought that there are two openings in the temporal region, allying
the group with the Rhynchocephalia. Dr. Huene is more positive
that there is but one, like that of the ichthyosaurs. In this state
of indecision, the proganosaurs maybe dignified b}' giving them an
ordinal position by themselves.
CHAPTER X
PROTOROSAURIA
PROTOROSAURUS
The genus Protorosaurus is of peculiar interest, as one of the
first, if not the first, known fossil reptiles, described by Spener
as long ago as 1 710 as a crocodile, from fragmentary remains found
in 1706 in the Permian deposits of Thuringia. Numerous other
skeletons or parts of skeletons attracted the attention of naturalists
of the eighteenth century, but were very imperfectly described.
No name was given to the animal represented by the various speci-
mens until 1840, when Herman von Meyer restudied all the known
material and described it under the name Protorosaurus speneri.
The position of the genus among reptiles always has been and yet
is uncertain, for the reason that the structure of the skull, and
especially the structure of the temporal region, has never been
satisfactorily determined. Seeley, in 1887, described more fully
the original specimen of Spener, now preserved in the museum
of the College of Surgeons of London, and because of certain
peculiarities which it showed proposed for its reception the order
Protorosauria. He thought that he detected an upper temporal
vacuity, like that of lizards, but was very uncertain about the
structure of the lower part of the temporal region. The writer,
who has examined this tvpe specimen, must admit that the struc-
ture of the region here is very doubtful. Under the general assump-
tion, however, that all old reptiles must be related to Sphenodon,
the Protorosauria have generally been classified as a suborder
of the Rhynchocephalia. It is merely another instance of the
proclivity we all have to propose hypotheses, and then, speedily
forgetting that they are hypotheses, to accept them as facts.
Protorosaurus was long supposed to be an aquatic reptile, but
we now know that it was a strictly terrestrial one, probably with
chmbing habits; and the genus concerns us only by reason of its
possible relationships to distinctly aquatic reptiles of a later age.
132
PROTOROSAURIA
133
A few years ago the writer described a very slender, lizard-like
reptile about two feet in length from the Permian of Texas under
the name Araeoscclis, so named because of its slender legs. The
structure of both the skull and the skeleton of this rej^tile is now
quite satisfactorily known, so well known indeed that the accom-
panying restoration (Fig. 62) has little that is conjectural about
Fig. 62. — Life restoration of Araeoscclis; about one-fourth life size
it, at least so far as the form is concerned. The skull has a single,
upper temporal opening, quite like that of lizards, but the quadrate
is not loose below. And this is really what we should expect in
the ancestral lizards; and everything else of the skeleton, except
perhaps one character, is what would be expected. That one
character is the elongation of the cervical vertebrae, which are
134 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
Fic. 63.— Skeleton of Plcurosatirus. (After Lortct)
rKOTORosArRr.i 135
al)out twice the length of the dorsal \'ertebrae following them.
The cervical ribs arc very slender bones, articulating by a single
head with the centrum only. In these and other characters, so
far as they are known, Araeoscelis seems to agree with Prolorosaurus,
and both have very hollow bones.
PLEUROSAURUS
We may for the present be justified in maintaining the order
Protorosauria for those reptiles having a single, typically uj^per
temporal opening on each side, with a fixed quadrate, not includ-
ing the ichthyosaurs. It is not improbable, however, that when
more is known of the ancestors of the lizards, the whole group will
find its most natural place among the Squamata. This definition
will include a peculiar aquatic reptile that has been known for
many years, but which has been wrongly classed in the same family
as SphenodoH, on the purely gratuitous assumption that it has two
temporal openings on each side; we now know that it has but one.
This reptile, known scientifically as Pleurosaurus, was described
originally by H. von Meyer in 1843, but we are indebted to M.
Lortet for a more precise knowledge of the animal, and for the
figure (Fig. 63) which is here given of the skeleton. Not a few
excellent skeletons are preserved in the museums at Lyons and
Munich. The specimen here figured, as actually preserved,
measures about three feet in length; a part of the tail is missing,
which is known from other specimens to have been remarkably long.
The figures show clearly some of the remarkable aquatic
adaptations of the animal, especially the short neck, the very long
and narrow body, and the extraordinarily long and flattened tail.
The head is elongate triangular in shape, resembHng very much
that of the mosasaurs; and the external nostrils are likewise situated
remotely from the end of the snout, as in the mosasaurs. The
extremity of the snout has a beak-like projection. The teeth are
much longer, more pointed, and more recurved than is the case
with most land reptiles, indicating their use for the capture and
retention of slippery, quick-moving prey.
The single-headed ribs are short, proving that the body was
slender and doubtless cylindrical, more like that of a snake. The
136 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
tail was not only enormously elongated, but it was also compressed
into a Hat and effective propelling organ in the water. This
flattening of the tail is apparent from the skeleton, with its elongated
chevrons below and spines above, and it is also proved by the for-
tunate preservation of the extremity of the tail of one specimen,
showing not only the impressions of the scales in the matrLx, but
also the outUnes that the soft parts had in life. To quote from
Lortet, in translation: "The tail was covered wholly with small
scales, regularly hexagonal in shape, shining and nacreous, larger
Fig. 64. — Life restoration of Pleurosaurns
on the under side than above. The upper border of the tail was
surmounted by a broad crest, extending to its extremity, and com-
posed of large, oval scales." The body doubtless was wholly
covered with scales, though it is not probable that the caudal
crest continued along the back.
The limbs begin to show an aquatic adaptation, though not
very pronounced. They are much shorter and smaller than are
those of land-crawling reptiles; and the bones of the second series,
that is, the radius and ulna, tibia and tibula, are relatively short,
the beginning of adaptation to water habits. It is very probable
that the feet were webbed, though the fifth digit, as usual, is shorter
than the fourth. Doubtless on land the creature moved about
PROTOROSMRIA it,-]
in a serpentine way, for it could not have progressed very rapid!)'
by the aid of its legs alone. The hind legs are longer than the
front legs, and they were connected firmly with the body by means
of a sacrum. The number of vertebrae in the neck, is only five.
The number of dorsal vertebrae is forty-three, a larger number
than is known in any other air-breathing vertebrate with legs.
Upon the whole, these lizard-like, almost snake-like pleuro-
saurians present some very curious adaptations to water life. In
water they were doubtless speedy, swimming in serpentine undula-
tions, with the small legs for the most part folded against the body
and only of occasional use. Doubtless, too, had the pleurosaurs
lived longer in geological history, they would have become quite
snake- or eel-like, just as have some modern salamanders.
In all probability the pleurosaurs lived habitually in fresh water,
perhaps visiting the shores for refuge, or for the hatching of their
young. That they were not on the way toward a terrestrial
snake-like body is evident from the flattened tail, and especially
the crest of scales above; the tail was like that of the sea-snakes
of the present time. Plenrosaurus, then, affords the solitary
instance among reptiles of aquatic adaptation by the diminution
of both front and hind extremities and the acquisition of a snake-
like body and snake-like habits.
CHAPTER XI
SQUAMATA
The order Squamata, so called because of the dermal covering
of overlapping horn\- scales, comprises the great majority of living
reptiles. Although the scaly covering is characteristic of nearly
all the members of the order, the most essential differences dis-
tinguishing them from other reptiles are, as usual, found in the
skeleton, and especially in the skull. The quadrate bone, that to
which the lower jaw is articulated on each side, is not wedged in
immovably between other bones of the skull, as in all other reptiles,
but is, instead, freely articulated with the cranium in such a way
that its lower end moves both backward and forward, as well as
inward and outward. This freedom of movement has in the past
been thought to be due to the loss of a lower temporal arch, a
bony bar connecting the lower end of the quadrate with the hind
end of the upper jaw. which is very characteristic, for instance, of
the RhvTichocephalia. Indeed, because of the many primitive
characters which the lizards possess, it has generally been supposed
that the order was an early branch of the rhynchocephalian stem.
But we are now quite sure that the lizards are as primitive as the
Rhynchocephalia. and that their origin, as an independent branch
of the reptilian stem, goes quite as far if not farther back quite
sure that the ancestors of the lizards never had a lower temporal
arcade and two temporal vacuities, but that the looseness of the
quadrate bone has been due to the gradual loss of a bone which
covered the whole side of the skull until only the upper part of
it was left. In other words, the ancestral skull of the Squamata
must have been like that of Araeoscclis, more fully described under
the Protorosauria, a group than which there is perhaps none more
closely allied to the Squamata.
The bones of the roof of the mouth of the Squamata — that is,
of the palate — are narrow and long, and are not closely articulated,
138
SQUAMATA 139
as in most other reptiles; they often bear teeth, a i)riniitive char-
acter. The teeth of all living lizards and snakes are not inserted
in sockets, as are those of the crocodiles, but are co-ossified to the
margins or sides of the jaws or the bones of the palate. Rut this
is probably not a primitive character; doubtless the teeth of the
early lizards were inserted in sockets like those of most other rep-
tiles. The shoulder bones are absent in many and vestigial in
some others. When present and fully developed, they comprise
the shoulder-blades or scapulae, a single coracoid on each side,
the clavicles, and an interclavicle. The vertebrae, except in some
lizards, are procoelous, that is, with the body concave in front and
convex behind, a peculiar structure that was developed only in
crawling animals. In addition to the usual articulations for the
union of the vertebrae there are also, in some of the lizards
and mosasaurs and all of the snakes, additional ones called the
zygosphene and zygantrum, which will be best understood by
reference to Fig. 12, p. 28. But Httle less characteristic than
the loose articulation of the lower jaws, so unique in this
order of reptiles, is the manner of attachment of the ribs.
They are always single-headed, articulating only with the body
or lower part of the vertebra. The single-headed ribs of the
plesiosaurs articulate with a projection on each side of the
arch of the vertebra; those of the turtles to the space between
the adjacent vertebrae; nearly all other reptiles have double-
headed ribs, articulating in various ways. This character, it is
seen, though apparently a simple one, immediately distinguishes
a lizard or a snake from all other animals, except the thalattosaurs
and protorosaurs.
There is much dif^'erence of opinion among naturalists as to the
proper classification of the dift'erent groups of this order of reptiles.
Usually it is divided into four suborders, the Lacertilia or lizards;
the DoUchosauria or long-necked lizards of the past; the ^Slosa-
sauria, or extinct swimming lizards; and the Serpentes or Ophidia,
the snakes. It matters very little which classification one accepts
so long as it is remembered that the first three groups are closely
related to each other.
I40 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
LIZARDS
Popularly a lizard is any four-legged reptile covered with
scales, but such a definition is not strictly correct, since some
lizards are legless and some other four-legged reptiles are covered
with horny scales, notably the tuatera or Sphcnodon of New
Zealand, a reptile long classed with lizards, but now known to
belong to quite a ditTerent order. Bearing in mind those characters
given as characters of the order, it will be necessary to mention
only those distinguishing the Hzards from the snakes.
It is true that the great majority of Hzards have four legs, while
the snakes are always functionally legless, but there are some
Fig. 65. — Iguana. (By permission of the New York Zoological Society)
lizards, like the glass snakes and the amphisbaenas, or slow lizards,
which are quite legless and there are some snakes which have small
but functionless hind legs. As usual, more important differences
are found in the skull. The brain-case in all snakes is surrounded
on all sides by bone, for the better protection of the brain, with the
head resting quite prone on the ground. The brain of the lizards,
for the most part, is protected on the sides and in front by a simple
membrane. Nearly all lizards have movable eyeUds, while snakes
do not; snakes have a single lung, and a protrusible tongue, which
very few lizards possess; and the lower jaws in front are united
in the snakes by a ligament only. Notwithstanding these differ-
ences, the snakes and lizards are closely related animals, and must
SQL. I MAT A- 141
have come from a common ancestry; among all rti)tik's the known
geological history of the snakes is shortest.
Lizards, on the other hand, have a very high antiquitw begin-
ning, as we now know, at least as long ago as early Triassic times.
They still have many primitive characters in their structure and
are the least advanced type of reptiles now living, with the excep-
tion of the tuatera. Their remains are seldom found in the rocks,
probabl}- because they have always been so strictly terrestrial in
habit, for the most part seldom frequenting even the vicinity of
the water. The true lizards now living number about eighteen
hundred kinds, classified into about twenty famihes, divided among
four chief groups, of which the chameleons, the amphisbaenas, our
common lizards, and the monitors are representatives.
Most living lizards are inhabitants of warm climates, though
some extend rather far north in the temperate zone. With the
exception of New Zealand, and the polar and subpolar regions,
lizards are found in all parts of the world. The great majority
Hve only in high and dry places, though some are denizens of low
and marshy places, a few even not being averse to the water.
They are, for the most part, spry in their movements, some little
ones scarcely six inches in length taxing a vigorous man's speed
to capture; and many are expert climbers of cliffs, trees, and
even the ceilings of residences. Some, the remarkable little flying
dragons of Ceylon, have an extraordinary development of the
skin on the sides of the body, supported by the expanded ribs,
forming a sort of parachute whereby the creatures can sail con-
siderable distances through the air. Nearly all are carnivorous,
feeding upon small mammals, birds, other reptiles, frogs, and
insects; a few only are herbivorous, such as the iguanas, which
are often used for human food. Nearly all lizards are oviparous,
laying from two to thirty eggs. In size the great majority are small,
less than a foot in length; but some, such as the monitors and
iguanas, reach a length of from four to six feet, or even more, and
certain extinct monitors of India are known to have attained a
length of thirty feet. They are, for the most part, slender, grace-
ful, prettily marked, and quite inoffensive creatures. A few are
short, flat, or stumpy in shape, such as the so-called horned toad.
142
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
One or two species only, the "Gila monsters," are reputed to be
venomous.
There is but a single species of lizard now living which is in
any true sense aquatic in habit, the well-known sea-lizard of the
Galapagos Islands, scientiiically known as Amhlyrhync/ius crislatus.
It is a large lizard, with a short rounded head, a flat tail, and webbed
Fig. 66. — Amblyrhynclms crislatus, the Galapagos sea-lizard. (From Brehm)
feet. Its specific name is derived from the erect fringed crest
along its back and tail. Its habits arc best given in Darwin's
words:
It is extremely common on all the islands throughout the group, and lives
exclusively on the rocky sea-beaches, being never found, at least I never saw
one, even ten yards inshore. It is a hideous looking creature, of a dirty black
color, stupid and sluggish in its movements. The usual length of a full-grown
one is about a yard, but there are some even four feet in length; a large one
weighed twenty pounds. The tails are flattened sideways, and all four feet
are partially webbed. They are occasionally seen some hundred yards from the
SQUAMATA 143
shore swimming about. When in the water this lizard swims with perfect
ease and quickness, by a serpentine movement of the body and llattened tail —
the legs being motionless and closely collapsed to the sides. A seaman on board
sank one, with a heavy weight attached to it, thinking thus to kill it directly;
but when an hour afterward he drew up the line it was quite active. Their
limbs and strong claws are admirably adapted for crawling over the rugged
and fissured masses of lava, which everywhere forms the coast. The nature
of this lizard's food (seaweed) as well as the structure of the tail and feet, and
the fact of its having been seen voluntarily swimming out at sea, absolutely
proves its aquatic habits; yet there is in this respect one strange anomaly,
namely, that when frightened it will not leave the island. Hence it is easy
to drive these lizards down to any little point overhanging the sea, where
they will sooner allow a person to catch hold of their tails than jump into the
water. They do not seem to have any notion of biting; but when much
frightened they squirt a drop of lluid from each nostril. 1 threw one several
times as far as I could into a deep pool left by the retreating tide, but it invari-
ably returned by a direct line to the spot where I stood. It swam near the
bottom, with a very graceful and rapid movement, and occasionally aided
itself over the uneven ground with its feet. As soon as it arrived near the edge,
but still being under water, it tried to conceal itself under the tufts of seaweed,
or it entered some crevice. I several times caught the same lizard by driving
it to a point, and, though possessed of such perfect powers of diving and
swimming, nothing could induce it to enter the water; and as often as I threw
it in it returned in the manner described above. Perhaps this singular piece
of apparent stupidity may be accounted for by the circumstance that this
reptile has no enemies whatever on shore, whereas at sea it must often fall a
prey to the numerous sharks.
These lizards are of much interest as indicating one of the ways
in which true land reptiles have become aquatic in their habits.
Tempted by the abundance of food growing in shallow water a
little beyond their reach, the reptiles ventured farther and farther
to obtain it. The tail gradually became a propelling organ,
though the lizard still retained in large measure its land habits
and land feet, because of the dangers from its water enemies. It
is not at all improbable that, in course of time, were these Galapagos
lizards left unmolested, they would become fleeter swimmers by
the development of a terminal caudal ftn and paddle-like legs,
thus competing with their aquatic enemies and no longer needing
recourse to the land for protection. They also serve to indicate
that long tailed acjuatic reptiles never used their legs to an appre-
ciable extent as organs of propulsion in the water.
144
]VATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
Flal-hcadcd lizards. — Among the living lizards there is one group,
called the monitors, which have so many characters peculiar to
themselves that they seem rightfully entitled to an isolated place
among the lizards of the present time. The group includes about
thirty species, all belonging in the one genus Varanus, and all
living in India, Africa, and Australia. In size, some of the species
of Varamis are the largest of all terrestrial lizards known in the
past or present; in other ways also they have reached the maxi-
mum of specialization among lizards. The head is pointed,
broad, and flat, and the body and tail are long. The}- have nine
Fig. 67. — Varanns, Australian monitor lizard. (By permission of the New York
Zoological Society.)
vertebrae in the neck, a larger number than is to be found in any
other terrestrial lizard. Unlike other lizards they have a pro-
trusible tongue like that of the snakes. All are carnivorous in
habit, feeding upon small backboned animals, insects, and especially
upon eggs, which they crush between their teeth while holding
them aloft. Most species live wholly upon the land, and some
are arboreal. Others, especially those of the Nile, live about
water and are excellent swimmers. The terrestrial species have a
round tail and small external nostrils, but the water species have
the tail much flattened, and the nostrils have large cavities,
which, when closed under water, are said to serve as reservoirs of
SQL' AM ATA 145
air for respiration. Of one of these swiniminj^ species Aiiiiandalc
writes:
]\iranus salvator is common in Lower Siam where it is equally at home on
hind, in water, and among the branches of trees. The eggs are hiid in hollow
tree trunks. When in the water the lizard swims beneath the surface, the legs
being closely applied to the sides, and the tail functioning both as oar and
rudder.
These Hzards take to the water to escape from their hind
enemies and not for food, a habit also known among certain other
Hzards, and one precisely the reverse of that of the Galapagos
lizards. It would seem very probable that animals of such carniv-
orous habits as are the monitors might easily learn to capture
water animals for food and thus eventually become aquatic in
habit. This inclination toward, and partial adaptation to, water
habits in the monitors is of much interest because in all probabilit\-
the instinct is one of long inheritance from those remote ancestors
which gave origin to the truly aquatic members of the order.
Though the known geological history of the monitors does not
extend far back, they are so intimately alhed in their anatomical
structure to the aquatic and semiaquatic lizards of Cretaceous
times that there could seem to be no doubt of the common ancestry.
Dolichosaurs. — About fifty years ago Professor Owen, the famous
Enghsh paleontologist, described a peculiar semiaquatic lizard
from the Cretaceous rocks of England to which he gave the name
Dolichosaums, in allusion to the slender form of the body. Just
what relations these slender hzards have to modern lizards has long
been a problem; some have thought that they were their pro-
genitors, but there are very good reasons for doubting this. No
modern lizards, save the monitors, have more than eight vertebrae
in the neck, while these dolichosaurs had as many as seventeen, a
remarkable speciahzation for aquatic Hfe that could hardly have
been lost by their descendants. For this reason the doHchosaurs
have usually been considered as representing a distinct suborder.
But they have many resemblances otherwise to the monitors.
They were semiaquatic in habit, and never more than six feet
in length. They are yet imperfectly known, and no restoration
of any form has hitherto been attempted. Their peculiar interest
146 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
lies in the elongation of the neck, quite like that of the whollv
unrelated nothosaurs and proganosaurs, which have been described
in the foregoing pages. Doubtless similar habits in each had like
results, but just what these habits were in the slender lizards we
do not yet know.
Aigialosaurs. — Within recent years a number of other lizards
have been made known from the Lower Cretaceous rocks of Dal-
matia which present most remarkable intermediate characters
between the monitors, dolichosaurs, and the mosasaurs, the famous
sea-lizards of Upper Cretaceous age. Some of these lizards had
twelve or thirteen vertebrae in the neck, while others had but
seven — an unusually short neck characteristic of the mosasaurs.
These latter kinds, belonging to two or three genera, are included
in a distinct group. They were long and slender, the head
long and pointed. The teeth, conical and sharp, were attached
in shallow pits, quite as in the mosasaurs. The lower jaws had a
hinge just back of the teeth, as in the mosasaurs, of which the only
trace in modern lizards is found among the monitors. Still more
remarkable, though perhaps not so easily appreciated, is the shape
of the quadrate bone, with a broad flaring rim for the ear cavity,
quite unlike that of land lizards, but quite like that of the mosa-
saurs. In fact, the very peculiar skull is almost identical with that
of the true sea-lizards. The body and tail also resemble those of
the mosasaurs more than those of the monitors, but there is a
firm attachment of the pelvis to the backbone, and the legs are
long and lizard-like, though not as long as those of land lizards.
The feet were webbed in life, and the toes have no claws, conclu-
sively demonstrating their water habits. The vertebrae indeed
have the same peculiar articulations, called zygosphenes, as in
most of the mosasaurs. The largest aigialosaurs were about six
feet in length, that is, of about the size of the smallest known
mosasaurs.
We have then in the aigialosaurs nearly every known inter-
mediate character that we could wish for in a connecting link
between the mosasaurs and the monitors, lizards that were equally
at home on land or in the water, and there can be scarcely a doubt
that they were either the direct ancestors or closely akin to the
SQUAMATA
'47
direct ancestors of the strictly murine mosasaurs; and scarcely
a doubt that they were the descendants of the actual forbears
Fig. 68. — Clidastes, an American mosasaur. Life restoration
of the modern monitors, which, as we have seen, have acf|uired
partial aquatic habits in escaping from their enemies. The
148 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
dolichosaurs we can now understand were a side branch from these
semiaquatic aigialosaurs which, speciahzing in another direction,
quickly came to grief, perhaps in competition with their more
agile and skilful short-necked kin.
Taking all these facts into consideration it seems best to unite
the monitors. doHchosaurs, and aigialosaurs into one group of
the Lacertilia, the Platynota, intermediate in place between the
true land lizards and the truly aquatic mosasaurs.
MOSASAURS
At St. Pietersberg, a small mountain in the vicinity of Maes-
tricht, Holland, there are immense subterranean stone quarries,
which have been worked for more than a thousand years. The
stone quarried from them is a sandy limestone of Upper Cretaceous
age containing many w-ell-preserved remains of extinct animals
that have long been sought by collectors of fossils. In 1776 Major
Drouin — an oflficer of a near-by garrison, one of much mihtary
importance in those days — secured from one of these quarries
some bones of an extinct reptile, which, though of interest, afforded
but little information concerning the structure and affinities of the
animal to which they had once belonged. In 1780 a very perfect
skull, in excellent preservation, of the same kind of an animal was
obtained from the same quarry by Dr. Hofmann, an army surgeon
of the same garrison, whose interest in su^h things had been incited
by Major Drouin's collections. This spcvi.nen, so renowned in
science, has had a remarkable and eventful human historw in
part related by St. Faujas de Fond, a French commissary of the
"Army of the North," and one of the participants:
In one of the great galleries or subterranean quarries in which the Cre-
taceous stone of St. Pieter's Mount is worked, about five hundred paces from
the entrance, and ninety feet below the surface, the quarrymen exposed part
of the skull of a large animal in a block of stoncvvhich they were engaged in
quarrying. On discovering it ihcy suspended their work and went to inform
Dr. Hofmann, surgeon to the forces at Maestricht, who for some years had
been collecting the fossils from the quarry, remunerating the workmen liber-
ally for the discovery and preservation of them. Dr. Hofmann, arriving at the
spot, saw with extreme pleasure the indication of a magnificent si>ecimen; he
directed the operations of the men, so that they worked out the block without
SQUAMA lA ,49
injury to the fossil, and he then, by degrees, cleared away theyiehling matrix
and exposed the extraordinary jaws and teeth, which have since been the sulj-
ject of so many drawings, descriptions, and (hscussions. This fine specimen
which Dr. Hofmann had transported with so much satisfaction to his collection,
soon became, however, a source of much chagrin to him. Dr. Goddin, one of
the canons of Maestricht, who owned the surface of the soil beneath which was
the quarry whence the fossil was obtained, when the fame of the fossil reached
his ears, pleaded certain feudal rights in support of his claim to it. Hofmann
resisted and the canon went to law. The whole chapter supported their rever-
end brother, and the decree ultimately went against the poor surgeon, who
lost both the specimen and his money, for he was made to pay the costs of the
action. The canon, leaving all remorse to the judges who pronounced the
iniquitous sentence, became the happy and contented possessor of this unique
example of its kind. [Translation by Lcidy.]
But the canon was ultimately despoiled of his ill-gotten treasure.
At the siege of Maestricht in 1795, the famous skull to which Hof-
mann had devoted so much anxious thought and labor, fell into
the hands of the French and was carried ofif as one of the spoils
of war. So widely celebrated had the specimen become during
the fifteen years which had elapsed since its discovery, through
the writings of several noted scientific men, that the French general
commanded his artillerists to spare the house in which it was known
to be. The canon, however, shrewdly suspecting that such an
unexpected and extraordinary mark of favor was not for his own
sake but rather for the sake of the famous fossil, had it removed
and carefully hidden ^'n ^ house in the city. After the capitula-
tion of Maestricht the eagerly sought-for fossil was not to be found,
and the offer of a reward of six hundred bottles of wine, so the
story goes, was made for its recovery. So tempting was the offer
that, ere long, it was brought in triumph to the house of St. Faujas
de Fond, by a half-dozen grenadiers, whence it was later trans-
ferred to Paris, where it now is.
We may well sympathize with Dr. Hofmann in the loss of his
cherished specimen, since, had it not been for his zeal, money, and
labor, it would never have escaped the usual fate of such things-
complete destruction. But we must remember that St. Faujas
de Fond, the recorder of this history, was a Frenchman, and some-
what interested in robbing the reverend canon of it; possibly there
is another side of the story which has never been to'ld.
I50 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
After peace was declared, one has regretfully to add that the
canon, not Dr. Hofmann. was reimbursed for it. or so it is said.
Cuvier rather naively says that it was ceded to the Garden of
Plants of Paris, perhaps in the way that many other things are
ceded to the conqueror in time of war. The specimen is really
a good one, even when compared with many found in recent years,
and there is little wonder that the cupidity of St. Fond was incited
by it. Casts of it are now or have been in nearly every noted
museum of the world, and pictures of it illustrated nearly every
textbook of geology published during the first three-quarters of the
past century. It had been the subject of considerable contro-
versy even before it came into the hands of Cuvier. Peter Camper
figured and described the skull as that of a whale or ''breathing
fish''; while St. Fond himself later called it a crocodile. Crocodile
or alligator skeletons were rare in those days, and St. Fond
made a special trip to the British Museum to study one. But it
was really Adrian Camper, a son of Peter Camper, who deserves
the credit, so often wrongly ascribed to Cuvier, for the recognition
of the true nature of the fossil. He insisted that the animal was
a lizard allied to the living monitors, an opinion which it will
be seen has finally been proved to be correct within very recent
years.
In 1808 this famous skull, and all other known remains of a
similar nature, came under the observation of Cuvier, the renowned
French naturalist and paleontologist, who confirmed the views of
Adrian Camper. He fully described and figured all the known
parts of the skeleton that had later come to light, calHng the animal
the great lizard of the Meuse, the river near which Hofmann's
specimen was found. Conybeare, a well-known paleontologist
of England, some years later formally christened it Mosasaunis.
a transliteration of Cuvier's phrase, from the Latin Mosa, for
Meuse, and saurus, a lizard. For more than half a century Cuvier's
figure of the skull of the original specimen appeared in works
on geology over the name Mosasaurus hofmanni, or Mosasaurus
camperi. One could wish that the former name for the species
might prevail, in recognition of the zealous doctor who was so
shal)})ily treated in his possession of the specimen.
SQUAMATA
151
For some years the few specimens discovered
by Drouin and Hofmann were all that were
known of the mosasaurs. A few others of
related forms were discovered in England, and
some were reported from New Jersey by early
explorers, but there was little i)ublished about
the mosasaurs till 1843, when Dr. August Gold-
fuss, a noted German paleontologist, described
and beautifully figured an excellent specimen
from the United States. This specimen also
had a rather eventful history. It was dis-
covered early in the fourth decade by Major
O'Fallen, an Indian agent, near the Great Bend
of the Missouri River, whence it was trans-
ported by him to St. Louis and placed in his
garden as a curiosity. It happened that Prince
Maximilian of Wied, the famous naturalist, in
his travels through the United States, saw the
specimen and secured it, taking it to Germany
on his return. He presented it to the Museum
of Haarlem where Goldfuss saw and described
it. Rather oddly, this specimen was of a
species closely allied to the original one of
Maestricht, a species which has since only
rarely been found. It was called Mosasaurus
maximiliani by Goldfuss, though some time
previously, it has since been found, some frag-
ments of the same species were described by
Harlan, an American author, under the name
Ichthyosaurus missonriensis. Goldfuss' paper
was strangely overlooked by subsequent
writers, and it was not till the discovery of
numerous remains of mosasaurs by Leidy,
Cope, and Marsh in the chalk of western
Kansas, nearly thirty years later, that much
was added to the world's knowledge of these
strange reptiles.
i--iri
O
U
^ ! i I
u
To
o
s
o
u
c
3
O
B
, pubis; //, ilium; is, ischium
lowed whole by the mosasaurs. In several instances the fossilized
stomach contents, composed chiefly or wholly of fishes, have been
found between the ribs of mosasaurs, and in none were the fishes
more than two or three feet in length, though the reptiles were
from sixteen to twenty feet long. Possibly the largest mosasaurs
those thirty or thirty-five feet in length, might have captured and
swallowed fishes six or seven feet long, but in all probability their
usual prey was of smaller relative size.
The very loose construction of the pelvic bones, those to which
the hind legs are articulated, is an evidence of more complete
adaptation to water life than was or is the case with any other
water air-breathers except the ichthyosaurs and cetaceans. The
sacrum had entirely lost its function as a support to the pelvis
and had disappeared, that is, the vertebrae composing it had become
i6o WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
»
quite like the adjacent ones, by the loss of the ribs connecting them
with the ilium. The small pelvis was suspended loosely in the
walls of the abdomen, or at the most was feebly connected with
a single vertebra b\- ligaments. It was entirely useless as a support
for the legs. The mosasaurs could not possibly have raised their
bodies from the ground while on land. It is well known that the
land lizards and the crocodiles raise their bodies free from the ground
while running or walking; none drags its body over the surface.
In several instances complete or nearly complete skeletons of
mosasaurs have been discovered with the different bones nearly
all in the positions and relations they had after the decomposition
of the flesh, together with the carbonized remains of the skin and
Fig. 78. — Photograph of carbonized remains of scales of Tylosaurits, natural size
impressions of the investing scales and membranes. The nature
of the body covering is therefore known with certainty from nearly
all parts of the body. The body everywhere, save on the mem-
brane between the fingers and toes, and perhaps on the top of the
skull, was covered with small overlapping scales, very much like
those of the monitors. These scales, however, were small and
smooth in comparison with the size of the animals, those of a
mosasaur twenty feet in length being almost precisely the size
of those of a monitor six feet long. The top of the skull seems to
have been covered with horny plates, as in most lizards. In one
instance parallel dark bars, obliquely placed, and of narrow width,
formed by carbonized pigment, were observed by the writer. As
has been stated, in some instances fish bones and fish scales have
SQUAMATA \(>\
been observed among the fossilized stomach contents, and it is
quite certain that the food of these creatures must have been com-
posed chiefly of fishes, though of course it is not improbable that
other small vertebrates, birds, pterodactyls, the young of plesiosaurs,
and possibly small mammals, may occasionally have formed a
part of their diet. That the mosasaurs were very pugnacious
in life is conclusively proved by the many mutilations of their
bones that have been observed, mutilations received during life
and partly or wholly healed at the time of death. Bones of all
vertebrates are repaired after injury by the growth of more or less
spongy osseous material about the injured part, forming a sort
of natural splint. This material is more or less entirely removed
by absorption when it is no longer required for the support of the
broken ends. Many such injured bones of the mosasaurs have
been found ; sometimes the bones of the hands and feet have grown
together, and not infrequently the vertebrae have been found
united by these osseous splints; occasionally even the skull itself,
especially the jaws, attest extensive ante-mortem injuries. In a
single instance the writer has observed the loss of a part of the tail,
where it probably had been bitten off. It may be mentioned, how-
ever, that the bones of the tail had no such "breaking points" in
the mosasaurs as have those of many land hzards, whereby a part
or all may be lost as a result of even a trivial injury, and then
regrown. Such a condition in an organ relied upon entirely for
propulsion would have been immediately fatal to the existence of
the mosasaurs. The large jaws and teeth are in themselves suffi-
cient evidence of the fiercely carnivorous propensities of the mosa-
saurs. The constant renewal of the sharply pointed teeth, thereby
preventing deterioration by use or accident, preserved, even in the
oldest animals, the effectiveness of the youthful structure.
We may now understand how the mosasaurs seized and swal-
lowed their prey. Living constantly in the water, away from all
firm objects, with small, short limbs quite incapable of holding
strugghng prey, and the body not sufficiently serpentine to hold
it in its folds after the manner of snakes, the mosasaurs would have
found it difficult or impossible to swallow fishes of even moderate
size, were their jaws of the same construction as are those of the
1 62 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
land lizards. If they preyed upon small animals only, or if they
tore their prey to pieces after the manner of the alligators, there
would have been no especial difficulty irw deglutition. But it is
certain that the animals which the mosasaurs devoured were not
always small, and they must have been swallowed whole, since their
teeth. were not adapted, like those of the alligators and true croco-
diles, for the rending of bodies. One who has watched a snake swal-
low a frog or another snake will appreciate the difficulties against
which the mosasaurs contended in swallowing fishes a fifth or a
si.xth of the length of their own bodies. The ordinary snake, no
matter where or how it seizes its prey, invariably swallows it
head first. Its mandibles are even more loosely united in front
than were those of the mosasaurs, and while there is no joint in
the snake's mandibles such as there is in the mosasaurs', the loose
union of the various bones of the mandibles ser\'es the same purpose.
The frog or lizard, while firmly held by the slender teeth, is slowly
moved sideways by the alternate lateral action of the jaws till
the head is reached. Many non-poisonous snakes, if they find it
impracticable or impossible to reverse the position of their prey
in this way, wrap the folds of their body about it, holding it ftrmly
while they release their mouth-hold and seize it by the head.
An amusing instance of these habits came under the observation
of the writer not long ago, in Texas. A large "blue racer" (Bas-
canion), six feet four inches in length, caught an unusually large
bullfrog by one hind leg, but in almost less time than it takes to
relate, the head of the frog had entered the snake's gullet and the
mouth was closed over it, notwithstanding the vigorous muscular
and vocal protests on the part of the frog. Wishing to secure
the skull of the snake for his collection, the writer seized an ax
standing conveniently by and cut the snake cleanly in two. The
peristaltic action of the deglutitional muscles carried the frog
slowlv on about two feet farther to the ax-made orifice, from
which it emerged, and, after a few croakings against such unkind
usage, calmly hojjped ofT into the near-by pool of water I Many
])oisonous snakes release their prey after killing it; other snakes
may force their prey down the throat by pressing it against
the ground.
SQUAMATA lO
J)
Even small fishes could not possibly have been swallowed b\
the mosasaurs m any other way than hrad first, since the back-
wardly projecting, and often long, spines would have rendered
any other procedure impossible. Even after the head had entered
the gullet, deglutition could have been effectively comi)leted only
by the aid of some mechanism whereby the fish could have been
pulled or pushed back into the constricting fauces. The strong
teeth of the upper jaws and palate held firmly the struggling prey,
while the loosely united jaws, bending laterally at the joint back
of the middle, either alternately, or more probably in unison,
steadily forced it far enough back to be seized by the muscles
of the fauces.
The shape of the mosasaurs, though slender, does not suggest
extraordinary speed in the water; doubtless most of the fishes
that lived in the seas with them could swim faster than the\-.
Their prey was captured, for the most part at least, by sudden
and quick lateral movements, for which their powerful and flexible
paddles admirably adapted them.
It is a rather remarkable fact that, among the thousands of
specimens of mosasaurs which have been collected during the past
forty years in both Europe and North America, there never has
been found one of a very young animal. Of almost all other
animals occuring abundantly as fossils some specimens are sure
to be discovered of young and even embryonic individuals. It
is quite certain that all such voracious monsters as were the mosa-
saurs did not die of old age. Some specimens, it is true, have been
found that were evidently not full-grown animals, but the observed
differences in the size of the fossil bones are not great. All are of
adult or nearly adult animals. If the mosasaurs were oviparous,
as were the ichthyosaurs, and probably the plesiosaurs, and as
are some living land lizards, the apparently entire absence of
embryonic bones associated with often nearly complete skeletons
of the mosasaurs is inexplicable; certainly some mosasaurs must
have died a short time before the birth of their young. But
embryos have never been discovered, though numerous skeletons
inclosing fossilized stomach contents ^ have been found. From
this fact it would seem very probable that the mosasaurs were
i64 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
oviparous, as are most other lizards. But this, after all, may be
a hasty inference.
No known reptiles lay their eggs in the water. Perhaps there
is some reason why the eggs of reptiles and birds, so different from
those of fishes and amphibians, cannot hatch in water; and there
is no good reason for supposing that the mosasaurs were exceptions
to this rule. Unless carefully hidden or protected by the parent,
the eggs or very young of the mosasaurs would have been subject
to many and grave dangers. Fish eggs are usually small and pro-
duced in great numbers, thousands often being extruded from a
single female. Among so many there is a greater probability that
at least two will hatch and survive to maturity, reproducing their
kind. It is unreasonable to suppose that the Hzards of the past
were more prolific of eggs than are their relatives now living; nor
is it possible that their eggs could have been as small as are those
of most fishes. Modern lizards seldom lay more than twenty-five
or thirty eggs at a time; even the turtles, with their greater vicis-
situdes, seldom produce more than one hundred. The eggs of
the mosasaurs were certainly large and few in number, and the
young animals must have begun breathing air immediately after
escaping from the shells. If the mosasaurs were oviparous they
must have laid their eggs upon the shores and beaches, as do the
sea-turtles and the Crocodilia. Nor is it at all probable that the
female mosasaurs gave even that protection to their eggs or
young that the crocodiles and turtles give. The young mosasaurs.
perhaps reaching a foot in length, must have been left entirely
to their own devices and their own fate at the very earliest stages
of their independent careers.
The waters in which the mosasaurs abounded swarmed with
many kinds of predaceous fishes, to say nothing of the hordes of
their own kinds, all carnivorous in the highest degree, to all of
which the tender saurians must have been choice food. Possibly
the shallow waters of the bays and estuaries may have afTorded
protection to the newly hatched reptiles. It would seem probable
that the female mosasaurs went up the rivers for a shorter or longer
distance to lay their eggs or give birth to their young, and that the
young reptiles remained in such relatively protected places until
SQUAMATA 16
5
of a sufficient size to cope with the fierce enemies of the ()j)en seas.
We know practically nothing of the inhabitants of the lakes and
rivers during all the time in which the mosasaurs existed; and this
perhaps is the real reason why we have never yet found a specimen
of a young mosasaur.
We have seen that many skeletons of ichthyosaurs arc found
entire, and but httle disturbed in position, suggesting, if not proving,
that the animals as a rule lived and died far out in the deep seas,
away from the disturbing effects of currents of water on their
decaying bodies. Among the thousands collected, the great
majority of the specimens of mosasaurs consist of a few bones
or a part of the skeleton only. Moreover, nearly all specimens
X
Snniin
Fig. 79. — Head of Tylosaiin- are rounded, rugose, and obtuse, and could
have been used only for crushing hard objects, like moUusks,
crustaceans, etc. (Fig. 82). And not only was there a row of such
teeth on each jaw (only partly seen in the figure), but similar
teeth covered a large part of the palate. And
the lower jaws, it is seen, are rather massive.
The vertebrae were, of course, of the more
primitive kind, that is, with the ends con-
cave, both in front and behind. It would
have been strange indeed were they of any
other kind, since reptiles with ball-and-socket
joints to the vertebrae, that is, concave on
one end and convex on the other, as in
nearly all living reptiles, did not come into
existence till long after the thalattosaurs had
disappeared from geological history; and it
is also a curious fact that such vertebrae
appear to have originated only among animals
crav/ling on land, so that they would not
have been a character acquired by the thalattosaurs after descend-
ing into the water. It will be seen from the figure of a dorsal
vertebra that the rib was attached by a single articular surface,
almost exclusively to the body of the vertebra, quite like those
of all lizards, snakes, and mosasaurs, and unlike those of other
reptiles. This too may seem to be a trivial character to prove
relationships with the lizards, but it is a curious fact that no two
animals having different kinds of ribs are closely related to each
other. Possibly, however, this looser mode of attachment of the
ribs in the thalattosaurs was one of their peculiar adaptations to a
w^ater life, and may not have been derived from their land ancestors.
Of the limbs, only a few bones are known, but these are very
instructive. The arm bones, as shown in Fig. 84, are strikingly
Fig. 83. — Dorsal ver-
tebra of Thalattosaurus.
(After Merriam.)
174 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
like those of the mosasaurs. as will be seen by comparing the figure
on p. 157. The humerus is a little more elongated than that of
the mosasaurs. more nearly like the mosasaurian femur. The
shoulder-blade and the coracoid are imperfectly ossified, as is seen
from the figure — another characteristic of aquatic life. What the
fingers and toes were hke cannot be said; probably they were
bound together by membrane, forming
swimming paddles similar to those of the
mosasaurs. Some of the bones referred to
the pelvis are known, but it is not known
w^hether they are united to the spinal
column by a sacrum, as in land animals.
Nor is anything certainly known of the
hind leg or much of the tail. Since the
front legs show marked aquatic adapta-
tions, it is altogether certain that the hind
legs will be found to be modified more or
less, though not so much modified as the
front legs, because, as w^e have seen, the
front legs are always more specialized in
aquatic animals than the hind ones, even
as the hind legs are more specialized than
the front ones in land animals. Possibly the hind legs will be
found to be more like those of the Thalattosuchia, as shown on
p. 212, that is, partly terrestrial in character. Doubtless the tail
was long and flattened, possibly with a terminal fin-like dilation,
though this is less probable.
As regards the habits and food of the thalattosaurs. no better
summary can be given than that of Professor Merriam, in his own
words:
The remains of thalattosaurs arc known only in purely marine deposits
containing little or no material of terrestrial origin. They are associated with
a fauna consisting of numerous forms, both vertebrate and invertebrate,
which are not known to have existed away from marine areas. In the struc-
ture of the skeleton we find the abbreviated and broadened proximal segments
of the limbs, the slender snout with prehensile terminal teeth, and the median
superior nostrils, indicating a purely aquatic type. There can scarcely be
room for doubt that the thalattosaurs as a group were typical marine forms.
Fig. 84. — Thalattosaurus:
bones of front extremity:
s, scapula; c, coracoid; h,
humerus; r, radius; u, ulna.
(After Merriam.)
THA LA TTOSA URIA 1 7 5
The larger and more specialized species comprised in the genus Tluihittosaurus
were strictly natatory. They may have visited the shore, but, like the i)lesio-
saurs, were better fitted for swimming than for crawling. Of the smaller
Nedosaurus we unfortunately do not know the limbs. They may have been
considerably less specialized, and the animal to a correspondingly greater degree
a shore-dweller. Nedosaurus is, however, found in the same deposits with
other forms and appears to be as common as the others; so that it is safe to
consider it as having passed the greater part of its life away from the shore.
From what we know of the vertebral column of Thalattosaurus it appears
that the animal had a relatively short neck and a long dorsal region, the pro-
portions being nearly those in the vertebral column of some mosasaurs. Only
the anterior portion of the caudal region is known. The slender, rounded neural
spines with well-developed articulating processes seen here are not such as
commonly appear in forms with a highly specialized sculling tail, and it is
hardly probable that a caudal fin of large size was developed.
The anterior limbs evidently formed paddles of moderate size. The
posterior pair may have been larger, in compensation for lack of a strong scull-
ing tail. It is, however, possible, that as in Gcosaurus (of the thalattosuchian
crocodiles) the hind limbs were not typically natatory, and the distal end of the
tail was vertically expanded.
No specimens have yet been found which are well enough preserved to
show any remains of the stomach contents, and we have no definite evidence
concerning the food of the thalattosaurs, more than is furnished by the general
structure of the animal. The character of the paddles, the form of the skull,
and the presence of slender prehensile teeth in the terminal portions of the
jaws would indicate that they fed in part upon some swiftly moving prey
which was caught by a quick snap of the jaws, deglutition being assisted by the
curved teeth of the pterygoids. The heavy vomerine and posterior mandibular
teeth may have been used for crushing the light shells of ammonites, which
existed in vast numbers in the same seas.
CHAPTER XIII
RHYNCHOCEPHALIA
In some of the small islands near the northeast coast of New
Zealand certain small and peculiar, lizard-like reptiles, known as
tuateras, have long been known. For many years they were sup-
posed, even by scientific men, to be real lizards, so much do they
resemble in external appearances and in habits the lizards of other
parts of the earth. It was early observed, however, that they
presented certain remarkable internal differences from the real
lizards or Lacertilia, though it was not till about twenty-five years
ago that the importance of these dift'erences was recognized by the
late Professor Cope, who separated them into a distinct order quite
co-ordinate with the lizards, crocodiles, and turtles. These Uttle
reptiles, seldom reaching a length of two feet, have now become so
scarce that the New Zealand government protects them by law
from unnecessary destruction; nevertheless it will probably be
only a short time before they become extinct, the end of a long
genealogical line. No other living reptiles have retained more of
the old-fashioned or primitive characters than this Sphcnodon or
Hatteria, as the animal is called, and because of them it is of peculiar
interest to zoologists, and especially paleontologists.
The differences of these beaked lizards from the true lizards
are especially noticeable in the skull, and more especially in the
arrangement of the bones which give articulation to the lower
jaws (Fig. 8). In the lizards and snakes the quadrate bone is
loosely articulated at its upper end with the cranium, and has no
inferior bar or arch connecting its lower end with the jugal and the
back part of the upper jaw. Sphcnodon, on the contrary, has the
quadrate bone firmly fixed to its adjacent bones at both ends, and
is quite immovable. The vertebrae are biconcave Hke those of all
early reptiles, not concavo-convex as are the vertebrae of most
other living reptiles. The intercentra or hypocentra, little wedge-
shaped bones between the centra below, are more persistent in
176
RHYNCIIOCHril. ILIA 177
Sphcnodon than in any other living land animals except the gecko
lizards. Upon the whole the tuatera is the most old-fashioned of
living reptiles, and in consequence it has nearly lost out in com-
petition with new things.
With these living tuateras we have nothing further to do, since
they are land animals, living about the beaches of the New Zealand
islands, and only occasionally venturing into the water, hiding from
their enemies in the holes in the rocks. But, from some of their
antecedents, from some of their direct forbears perhaps, there have
gone ot^ at different times various branches, whose descendants
wandered into foreign lands or into foreign places, and lived and
Fig. 85. — Sphowdon punciatum, or tuatera. (From specimen in the Yale Uni-
versity museum.)
flourished for a brief time and then became extinct. Some of these
went down into the water and became more or less aquatic in
habit; some, indeed, changed their forms and habits so greatly
that they are often, perhaps rightly, segregated into different
orders. Whether or not they should be called Rhynchocephaha
matters Httle. however. It is merely a matter of opinion as to
how great the changes should be in order to entitle the offspring
to a genealogical tree all its own. Of these branches there are
two, whose relationships seem to be definite, the Choristodera and
Thalattosauria, though there is more doubt about the latter than
the former. A third group, that included Pleiirosaiirus. seems, from
178 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
more recent discoveries, to belong to a different line of descent and
has been described under the Protorosauria.
In the direct line of ancestry there is no known form that was
distinctly aquatic. The oldest known of these, perhaps, is that
shown in Fig. 86. Saphaeosaurus from the Jurassic of Solenhofen.
Its resemblance to the modern
tuatera is great, and doubtless its
habits were very similar, though its
rather long tail and rather short neck
possibly indicate subaquatic habits.
CHORISTODERA
Among the many reptiles of the
past which have sought a more con-
genial or a safer home in the water
„^ qr 1:==^- . few have had a more interesting his-
^^^r '^ t tory, or a briefer one, than those to
which the late Professor Cope gave
the name Choristodera in 1876.
Many students of repute consider the
group an order, others a suborder
of the Rhynchocephalia. The group,
whether order or suborder, are inter-
esting because of their long and
devious migrations from western
North America to Europe, or vice
versa, through rivers and ponds;
interesting also because of the per-
sistence of certain old-fashioned traits
that clung to them long after their
disappearance in other animals.
Perhaps these traits were among the
causes of their merely moderate success as animals of the water,
traits that led to their early dissolution. Like the proganosaurs,
which they must have resembled in external appearance not
a little, they wandered from their birthplace in the western
continent, to perish in the eastern; and like them their span of
existence was short.
Fig. 86. — Sa p/icosaurus , an
Upper Jurassic rhynchocephalian.
(After Lortet.)
RHYNCIIOCEPHALIA
•79
Their history among man-
kind, too, is brief. The first
known specimens, from western
North America, were described
by Professor Cope in 1876,
under the name Champsosaurus.
In the following year Professor
Gcrvais of Paris made known
another form from Rheims,
which he called Simocdosaurus,
so closely allied to the American
that even yet they have not
been sharply distinguished.
Some years later these European
specimens were more fully de-
scribed by the well-known
Belgian paleontologist, Dr.
Dollo, but it has been only
within the past few years that
our knowledge of the animals
has been made at all complete
by the discovery and description
of several excellent skeletons of
Champsosaurus by Mr. Barnum
Brown of New York.
These semiaquatic reptiles
never grew very large — not more
than four or five feet in length;
nor did they ever succeed in
becoming fully at home in the
water, certainly no more so than
our modern alligators and croco
diles. They remained to the
end of their comparatively brief
existence essentially land ani-
mals, probably seeking their
food in the water but fleeing to
the land for protection and for
Fig. 87. — Champsosaurus; skeleton, as
mounted in American Museum. (Brown.)
i8o
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
the breeding of their young. Their chief water adaptations are
seen in the elongate face and flattened swimming tail. Their legs
remained essentially terrestrial, and could have been of but little
use in the water for propulsion; the feet even were doubtfully
webbed, or if so, not more than arc those of the alligator.
Singularly, like the proganosaurs, their ribs were heavy and
stout, also suggesting bottom-crawling habits, like those of the
/ T^.
.^-
^yfyfi.iluCin..i'i'^-
Fig. 88. — Restoration of Champsosaiirus
living Galapagos lizards. The skull was lightly built, and the face
was long and slender, like that of the gavials and proganosaurs;
but, like those of the former and unlike those of the latter, the
nostrils were situated at the extreme tip. The hind legs were
firmly attached to the body by the sacrum; and no sclerotic bones
of the eyes have been discovered. The neck was neither unusually
long nor unusually short. The body was probably covered with
hornv scales.
RU YNCUOCEPIIA LIA
i8i
To the student of paleontology these animals are of interest
because of the retention of several primitive traits which had hmg
Fig. 89. — Champsosauriis; skull from above, (.\fter Brown)
disappeared in other known reptiles. While the vertebrae had
ceased to be perforated by the notochord, as in the early reptiles,
they were still shallowly biconcave. The first bone of the neck,
i82 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
Fig. 90
Brown.)
-Pectoral girdle of Champsosaurus. (After
the atlas, had changed but little from that of their very ancient
forbears of Permian times, and the bones of the palate still retained
numerous teeth scattered over it, like those of the same Paleozoic
ancestors. Most primitive and old fashioned of all was the pelvis,
which was so unlike that of all known contemporary or later
reptiles that, were a
paleontologist to see
it without knowing
whence it came, he
would be almost sure
to say that it belonged
to a Paleozoic, or at
least a Triassic, reptile,
and not only to an
early reptile but a very
primitive one at that.
This peculiarity con-
sists in the absence of
any opening between
the ischium and pubis, which is characteristic of every living verte-
brate with legs. And these and other old-fashioned characters
could not possibly have been new developments; they must have
existed in all the ancestors of the Choristodera from Paleozoic to
early Tertiary times, though not a single
other reptile is known to have pos-
sessed them, for the greater part of
this time. Perhaps when Asia and
northwestern America have been more
thoroughly explored for vertebrate fos-
sils, some of their ancestors which per- ^^^ g,.- champsosaurus;
ished on their great migration from the pdvic bones. (After Brown.)
western to the eastern continent in
late Cretaceous times will be discovered.
The choristoderans began their existence, so far as is now known,
in North America in late Cretaceous times and died out in both
Europe and North America in early Tertiary times. That is, they
were one of the few branches of reptilian life which not only wit-
RII YNCIIOCEPIIA LI A 1 83
nessed the extinction of the great dinosaurs and plesiosaurs, but
the advent also of the early placental mammals. They lived mil-
hons of years after the proganosaurs became extinct, and. similar
as they are in form, there is no relation between them. Moreover,
in all probability they did not migrate to the eastern continent over
the same route.
The structure of the head and teeth of the Choristodera clearly
indicates a fish-eating habit, or at least a diet of soft-bodied, free-
swimming invertebrates. The legs and ribs, as also the armor of
ventral ribs, like those of the plesiosaurs, point very insistently
toward a bottom-crawhng habit while in the water.
CHAPTER XIV
PARASUCHIA
The first known specimen of the order of reptiles now generally
known as the Parasuchia was found in Wiirtemberg, Germany, in
1826 and very briefly and inadequately described' two years later
by Professor George Jaeger. The specimen was a sorry one, and
was sadly misinterpreted by Jaeger. It consisted chiefly of casts
of the alveoli or sockets of a number of teeth, more or less con-
nected by corroded or decomposed portions of the jaws. He
recognized the casts as teeth of a peculiar reptile, but mistook the
roots for crowns, and, naturally concluding that such obtuse teeth
would be of use only for the mastication of vegetable food — about
the last kind of food to which the phytosaurs were addicted —
called the animal Phytosaiirus, meaning plant saurian. Because of
differences he observed in the shapes of the teeth he thought that
they belonged to two distinct species, which he called cylindri-
codon and cubicodon; but the difi'erences were due simply to the
difl'erent positions they held in the jaws.
Fourteen years later Hermann von Meyer, the renowned Ger-
man paleontologist, described and figured other remains of the
same or an allied reptile under the name Belodon plicningeri. In
subsequent papers during the next twenty-three years von Meyer
very fully described and beautifully illustrated the skulls and other
remains of this and other species, all of which he referred to the
genus Belodon, the name by which for many years the animals
' "The author showed drawings and some specimens of two hitherto unknown
reptiles from the white, coarse-grained sandstone, of which one in the form of the skull
resembles the gavial, but is distinguished by the cylindrical form of the lateral teeth
of the jaws; he therefore calls it provisionally cylindricodon, and a second species or
genus, of which, however, so far only fragments of the jaws have been found, because
of the four-cornered form of the teeth, cubicodon, while at the same time for the genus
or family, to which the remains of these animals have belonged, he proposes the name
Phytosaurus, since the teeth seem to be more adapted to a vegetable diet, even though
they have not been worn away, as in Iguanodon." — Isis (1828), p. 441 (translation).
184
PARASUCHIA 185
were generally known in scientific literature. Von Meyer thought
that he recognized in Bclodon kapfii, the species most often
figured in textbooks, the same animal that Jaeger had previously
described.
Von Meyer was not at all certain about the relationships of his
Belodon, though he recognized its aflfinity with the crocodiles. It
was Huxley who. in a famous paper on the evolution of the croco-
diles, published in 1875, united Belodon and another genus from the
Trias of Scotland, which he called Stagonolepis, with the Crocodilia
as representatives of the suborder Parasuchia, one of the three into
which he divided the order. Huxley admitted that the relation-
ships between the Parasuchia and the Mesosuchia or Eusuchia, the
other suborders which he proposed, were not as intimate as those
between the latter two, which were separated solely on the structure
of the palate and vertebrae, as has been explained in chap. xv.
As early as 1869 the late Professor Cope recognized certain forms
which had been previously described from Carolina as belonging
to the group, calling them Bclodon, but it was not until 1896 that
E. Fraas separated Bclodon planirostris of von Meyer as a member
of a distinct genus, to which he gave the name Mystriosuchus.
Here, as a part of the order Crocodilia, the phytosaurs remained
till within very recent years, though there have been some mild
protests against the association, especially by Marsh, Zittel, and
Baur. The famous English paleontologist, Richard Owen, located
the ''Belodontia," as the phytosaurs were often called, in his order
Thecodontia, based chiefly upon the manner of the insertion of
the teeth in sockets. But this has long since been shown to have
little value in the classification of reptiles. Various authors have
written about the phytosaurs in later years, notably Cope, Fraas,
Huene, and Jaekel, but it was J. H. McGregor who first definitely
separated the phytosaurs into a distinct order, in a careful revision
of the American forms. He called the order Parasuchia, after
Huxley, dividing into two suborders, the Phytosauria, after Jaeger,
and the Aetosauria, a group which, for lack of a better place, had
previously been classed with the Crocodilia, either as a member
of the Parasuchia or as an independent suborder by Zittel (the
Pseudosuchia). More recently Huene has shown that certain
i86 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
African reptiles from the Lower Trias had certain very definite
characters entitHng them to an independent position, for which he
proposed the order Pelycosimia. Upon the whole, however, these
characters seem to be primitive parasuchian, and the group may
provisionally be placed in the order Parasuchia, as a third suborder,
the Pelycosimia. The order Parasuchia, then, until we know much
more about the latter two groups, may be conveniently divided
into three suborders, the Phytosauria, Aetosauria or Pseudosuchia,
and the Pelycosimia, all of Triassic age.
McGregor was quite right in retaining for the suborder the
name Phytosauria, suggested by Jaeger in 1828, inappropriate as
the word is etymologically, but was hardly justified in substituting
the generic name Phytosaiirus for the long and well-known Bclodon,
because it is quite impossible to say that Jaeger's very fragmentary
specimen upon which he based the genus Phytosaiirus really is the
same as Belodon. Professor Fraas very kindly showed the writer
the original type-specimen of Jaeger, now preserved in the Stutt-
gart IMuseum, and both are agreed that it is impossible to prove
the identity of Belodon and Phytosauriis from the very fragmentary
and imperfect specimen. It is quite as probable, for instance, that
Phytosaurus and Mystriostichus are identical as that Phytosaurus
and Belodon are. Unfortunately, this is not the only case in ver-
tebrate paleontology where the fragmentary specimens to which
names have been given are inadequate to determine the species,
or genus, or even the family to which they belong; there have
been very many such instances. The pioneers in paleontology
were often justified in naming small and obscure fragments of
bones, or single bones. One would be justified even yet in giving
a name to an indeterminable fragment of a bird bone from the
Triassic formation, because the discovery of a bird of any kind in
that formation would be very important for science, even if its
precise kind might never be recognized from the specimen.
Nevertheless, the custom is a very reprehensible one when indis-
criminately followed. For these reasons the writer disagrees with
McGregor in substituting the inappropriate name Phytosaurus for
Belodon, the name by which the most typical forms were so long
known.
PARjISUCUIA 187
The Aetosauria, which have long been known from a marvelous
specimen found in Wiirtembcrg many years ago and described by
the elder Fraas, need not detain us long. They were relatively
small reptiles about two feet long, almost completely incased in a
bony armor, and purely terrestrial in habit. The skull even yet
is not perfectly known, and it is possible that when it is the group
may have to be dissociated from the phytosaurs. The nostrils
were not posterior, and the skull is short. Other specimens of the
same group have been described from the Upper Triassic rocks of
Massachusetts.
The Pelycosimia of Huene are very interesting as showing
apparently primitive forms with which the true phytosaurs may
have been intimately related ancestrally. They, too, have a rather
short skull with the nostrils in front, and were not at all aquatic in
habit. Not much is known about the single genus that is located
in the group, aside from the skull and a few limb bones.
PHYTOSAURIA
The Phytosauria, so far as known, were all reptiles of consid-
erable size, greatly resembling the crocodiles, and especially the
gavials in form and habit, but differing very greatly in having the
external nostrils situated far back near the eyes; in having no
false palate so characteristic of the Crocodilia; in having a more
primitive shoulder-girdle, consisting of a short coracoid, inter-
clavicle, and clavicles; and in having the ordinary t\-pe of pelvis,
that is, with the pubis entering into the acetabular articulation
for the femur. They were all, like the crocodiles, covered more or
less by a bony armor; there are two openings on each side of the
temporal region; there is no pineal Opening; the vertebrae are
gently biconcave, precisely like those of the early or mesosuchian
crocodiles; there is always an opening of considerable size, called
the preorbital foramen, in front of the eyes, as in some crocodiles,
many dinosaurs, and most pterodactyls; there is also an opening
through the back part of the mandibles as in crocodiles; and the
double-headed ribs are attached exclusively to the transverse
process of the arch, precisely as in the crocodiles, dinosaurs, and
pterodactyls. From all these it is evident that the phytosaurs are
1 88
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
X
PARASUCniA
189
related most nearly
to the crocodiles and
dinosaurs, and are
probably an early
branch of the stem
from which they, the
pterodactyls and the
birds, arose, a branch
that persisted only a
short time, geologi-
cally speaking, and
went entirely out of
existence at the close
of Triassic times,
leaving no descend-
ants behind. Never-
theless, in this
comparatively brief
life-span they devel-
oped not a few dis-
tinctive forms and
became widely dis-
tributed over the
earth. Their remains
are known from the
Upper Trias of Ger-
many, England, and
Scotland, India,
South Africa, and
from Massachusetts,
North and South
Carolina, and ma no-
places in the Rocky
Mountains. No true
phytosaurs are yet
known from South
America, but in all
Fig. 93. — Skull of Mystriosuchus, a phytosaur: pw,
premaxilla; m, maxilla; na, nasal; /, frontal; p, pre-
frontal; /, lacrimal; pf, postfrontal; po, postorbital;
pa, parietal; sq, squamosal; gj, quadratojugal;
pi, palatine; /, transverse; in, internal nares; en,
external nares; pt, pterygoid; bs, basisphenoid; eo,
exoccipital. (After McGregor.)
IQO
WATER REPTILES OF THE FAST AND FRESENT
probability they will be discovered there when the Triassic deposits
of that continent have been better explored for fossils. In the
Rocky Mountains, especially, their remains are widely scattered,
they have been found in many localities in Wyoming, Colo-
rado, Oklahoma, Utah, and New Mexico. Though for the most
part their known remains from these localities are yet fragmentary,
not less than four distinct genera have been described from these
Fig. 94. — Dorsal vertebrae of phyto-
saur: az, anterior zygapoph\sis; />:;, pos-
terior zygapophysis; d, c, articulations
of rib.
I*"iG. 95. — Scapula and coracoid of
RiUiodon caroUnensis, an .American phy-
tosaur. (After McGregor.)
regions: ^'Bclodon," AngislorJiimis, Paleorhimis, and Episcopo-
saurus. From the Carolinas and Massachusetts a single genus,
though described under numerous names, has been made known,
originally called by Emmons Ruliodon {Rhytidodon). And from
Europe and India at least as m.any more different genera are known.
All these genera are, however, so closely allied that they arc placed
in the single family Belodontidae.
PARASUCHIA
191
In BeloJon (Fig. 96), the earliest known and most t\pical
genus, perhaps, the moderately elongated face has a high crest
reaching nearly to its front end, and this type is known both from
Europe and from New Mexico.
Others have the face long and
slender, even longer and more
slender than in the ancient teleo-
saur crocodiles or the modern
1
■
1
I
k.
ii
M ,1k
W^S^i^fflw
WftP^ *>/gffl
m^ -i^uMiM
- —
Fig. g6. — Bclodon; restoration of head, Fig. 97. — Mystriosuchtts; restoration
from above. of head, from above.
192 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
gavials. In some forms the teeth are cyHndrical and slender
throughout, and there may be as many as fifty on each jaw, or
two hundred in all; while in others only the anterior teeth are
cylindrical and the posterior teeth are flattened and serrate along
their cutting edges. In the body not very great differences have
been observed. Some are more slender than others, and there are
minor differences in the shapes and sizes and numbers of the bony
scutes along the back and on the throat.
But they are all alike in their essential characters, a very long
beak with numerous teeth; the foremost ones on the expanded,
more or less spoon-shaped front extremity, are more or less, some-
times greatly, elongated. The jaws may be likened to a long and
slender pair of tongs with nipping teeth at the front end. The
strong, long, and flattened tail is sufficient evidence that the phy-
tosaurs were excellent swimmers, but, aside from that and the
posterior location of the external nostrils, directly over the internal,
few other aquatic adaptations are observed in the skeleton. There
are no sclerotic bony plates about the eyes, or at least none have
so far been discovered, although among the numerous known speci-
mens they would confidently be expected were they really present
in the skeleton; and the presence of bony armor negatives markedly
aquatic habits.
Doubtless on the whole the habits of the phytosaurs were not
very unlike those of the modern gavials, which they so strongly
resemble in form, size, and general characters. But they differ
very greatly from the gavials in the extreme posterior position of the
nostrils, and in the greatly elongated teeth of the front end of the
beak, teeth which must have had some especial and peculiar use.
Nor is the position of the nares to be accounted for satisfactorily
by reference to aquatic habits. It has been suggested that the
creatures used the very long and slender beak in prodding and
probing in the sand and mud for soft-bodied invertebrates, worms
and the like, for which the teeth would be especially fitted; and
that the posterior position of the nostrils may be in part, perhaps
wholly, accounted for by this habit, which permitted the reptiles
to breathe without extricating the beak from the mud or shallow
waters. That the animals were wholly and intensely carnivorous
PARASUCHIA 193
in habit is attested by their teeth; although they arc called "plant
saurians," they never had anything to do with plants in the way
of food. Unfortunately so far no specimens have ever been found
showing the remains of stomach contents, nor have any been found
showing impressions of the form of the body or of any of its parts.
Until such specimens are found, as they doubtless will be eventually,
one can be less sure of the precise details in their life reconstructions.
However, the skeleton is now known nearly completely, and this
suffices to give a very approximately correct idea of what the ani-
mals were Uke when alive.
CHAPTER XV
CROCODILIA
The order of reptiles to which the name Crocodilia is technically
applied comprises less than twenty-five living species, popularly
known as crocodiles, alligators, caimans, and gavials. They are
often of great size, ugly and repulsive in appearance, cruel and
vicious in habit, wholly carnivorous, and denizens, almost exclu-
sively, of fresh-water lakes or rivers in tropical and subtropical
regions; a few only venture into the sea near the shores. They are
all excellent and powerful swimmers, but are by no means exclu-
sively aquatic in habit, many of them spending a large part of the
time on the shores; and they invariably seek the land for the
deposition and hatching of their eggs. In size they are the largest
of living reptiles, some of the existing species reaching a length of
twenty-five feet, while some extinct species were probably fully
twice that length.
The geological history of the crocodiles is a very ancient one,
reaching back at least as far as the early Jurassic and probably to
the Triassic. The culmination of the order, at least so far as size,
variety, and numbers are concerned, was doubtless before the close
of the Mesozoic. The early crocodiles, however, were of a more
generalized structure in some respects, though specialized in others,
because of which naturalists in the past have usually divided the
order into three or four chief subdivisions, or suborders, two of
which, the Mesosuchia and the Thalattosuchia, became extinct
before or during Cretaceous time. The third suborder, the Para-
suchia of many textbooks, has now been unanimously separated
by paleontologists from the Crocodilia as an independent order.
The fourth suborder of the textbooks, the Eusuchia, a word meaning
true crocodiles, appeared in geological history, so far as we yet know,
shortly before the extinction of the Mesosuchia, and is best known
from the forms now living, all of which belong to it. Although the
194
CROCODILIA
195
modern crocodiles can hardly be called, as a group, purely aquatic
reptiles, we shall find it of interest, because of their intimate rela-
tion to the older and more strictly marine forms, to speak of them
somewhat in detail.
MODERN CROCODILES, EUSUCHIA
The crocodiles of the present — and we use the word in the
technical sense of Crocodilia — because of their general resemblance
to the lizards, or true "saurians," were classed with them by the
older naturalists, whence comes the popular name alligator, a cor-
ruption of the Spanish el lagarto, or ''the lizard," given to some of
Fig. 98. — Senegal crocodile. (By permission of the New York Zoological Society)
the South American forms by early explorers. But this resem-
blance is a superficial one only, as was early recognized by com-
parative anatomists. The crocodiles, indeed, are only remotely
related to the lizards.
The head or cranium is flattened and broad, the facial part or
snout sometimes greatly elongated and slender, and the external
nostrils are always situated at the front end. The bones of the
upper surface of the cranium and face have many pit-like depres-
sions. The neck is short and stout, and but little movable. The
body is somewhat depressed and flattened, not cylindrical and
slender, as in the more typical water reptiles. The tail is much
elongated and compressed, forming a powerful means of propulsion
196 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
in swimming, its breadth being increased by a vertical row of horny
plates above. The limbs are of the ordinary elongated type —
ambulatory rather than swimming legs — and are not of much use
for propelling the body in the water; the front legs indeed are
usually held close to the body while the animal is swimming.
The toes, however, are partially connected by webs, to a slight
extent only in the alligators and crocodiles, but much more so in
the long-snouted gavials. The feet have five toes in front and
four behind; and the loss of the fifth toe can only be ascribed
to terrestrial habits. The body is covered more or less with horny
scutes or scales, beneath which are several rows of thickened,
pitted, bony plates on the dorsal side, and sometimes also on the
under side, forming a more or less extensive bony armor. The
eyes have movable lids, as in most lizards, and the ear-opening is
small.
But the external appearance of these reptiles is not sufficient
to distinguish them widely from other groups, and we must resort
to the internal structure, especially that of the skeleton, for the
more essential differential characters. The most crucial of these,
the one which more than any other determines their relationships,
consists in the position and shape of the bone with which the lower
jaw articulates, the quadrate bone, so characteristic of reptiles.
As in the plesiosaurian and ichthyosaurian skulls, it is firmly united
with the adjoining bones, not articulating freely with them, as in
the lizards and snakes. But this fixed relation of the bones is very
unlike that of the plesiosaurs, ichthyosaurs, and turtles, in that it
is held in place by two bony bars or arches, the upper extending
forward to unite with the bones at the back part of the orbit, the
lower, with the hind extremity of the upper jaw. The lower jaws
are rigidly united in front, sometimes for a long distance; they have,
almost always, a hole or opening through the hinder part, known
in but few other reptiles. The bones of the palate are all firmly
united, forming a nearly complete roof, very unlike the condition
in the mosasaurs and lizards. The palate also is very peculiar
in the development of a plate of bone below the nasal chambers,
forming a complete bony canal on each side through which the
respiratory air passes far back to the internal opening of the nostrils
CROCOD/UA
197
above the pharynx, and not, as in other reptiles— save the ininic-
diate ancestors of the mammals — entering the mouth at the front
end. This peculiar arrangement of the air-i)assages, so like that of
ourselves, has much to do with the water habits of the crocodiles,
as we shall see.
The teeth are conical in shape, and are always restricted to the
edges of the jaws, above and below. They are inserted deepl\' and
Fig. 99 Fig. 100
Fig. 99. — Skull of Alligator mississippiensis, from below.
Fig. 100. — The same, from above: bo, basiocdpital; hs, basisphenoid; /, frontal;
y, jugal; /, lacrimal; w, ma.xilla; «, nasal; />, parietal; /)<;, palatine; />W7, prema.xilla;
pf, prefrontal; pr, postfrontal; pi, pterygoid; q. quadrate; qj, quadratojugal; tr,
transverse.
firmly in sockets, and are replaced frequently by new ones growing
beneath them, pushing the older ones out as their usefulness becomes
impaired by injury or by use. In some species there are as many as
thirty teeth in each side of the jaws, above and below, although the
broad-headed kinds have a smaller number.
The neck is short, as has been stated, but it always includes
in living forms nine vertebrae, a number probably slightly in excess
of that of their terrestrial forbears. By the peculiar mode of
198
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
attachment of the short "hatchet-shaped" ribs, much lateral
movement of the neck is prohibited, nor is any very great vertical
movement possible. The vertebrae of the whole column, save the
atlas, the second sacral, and the first caudal — which is a very re-
markable anomaly — are concave in front and convex behind, agree-
ing in this respect with those of all other living reptiles, save the
turtles, the tuatera, and some lizards. The ribs of the neck have
their two heads attached, one to the body of the vertebra, the
other to the arch, but those of the dorsal region, though double-
headed, have both become attached to the transverse projection of
the arch, a seemingly trivial character, but one which immediately
distinguishes all crocodiles from all other water reptiles, and from all
Fig. ioi. — Vertebrae of gavial from the side (cervical), and from in front (dorsal) :
as, anterior zygapophysis; />:;, posterior zygapophysis; 'pe
of reptiles as were some of the extinct reptiles, but that they have
survived so long, so many millions of years, is pretty good evidence
of endurance, to say the least.
CROCODILIA 20 1
Living crocodiles belong to three distinct groups or families:
the true crocodiles and alligators; the long-snouted crocodiles or
Borneo gavials; and the true gavials of India. ^Members of the
first of these families are reall)- only subaquatic, or amphibious in
habit; they move about on land with entire freedom, and often
seek their food there. Certain marked aquatic characters they do
possess, in the skull and tail, as we shall see. They are indigenous
to southern China, India, Africa, Madagascar, the southern part
of the United States, Central America, and the northern part of
South x\merica. The members of this family are distinguished
by the more or less broad and flat head, the possession of com-
paratively few teeth of large size, and by having the toes less
completely webbed. The crocodiles proper differ from the caimans
and alligators especially in the arrangement of the teeth. During
later geological times, that is, during early Tertiary times, the
geographical range of the Crocodilidae was much more extended
than it is at present, the remains of many often very large species,
being found in the lake deposits of the northwestern parts of the
United States, Great Britain, Germany, France, etc. Yet earlier,
in the late Cretaceous rocks of the United States, in Texas, and
Wyoming especially, there have been found rather scanty remains
of a gigantic crocodile which must have been nearly fifty feet in
length when living.
The second family, the Tomistomidae, or long-snouted croco-
diles, comprises but two living species, both restricted at the
present time to Borneo. These crocodiles have a moderately
slender snout, because of which they are sometimes called gavials,
though it is not nearly so slender as that of the true Gangetic
gavial. This family is probably older than either of the other
living ones, and is the only one known with certainty to have
lived during much of the Cretaceous times, several species of
considerable size having been found in New Jersey and Europe.
Their feet are better webbed than are those of the true crocodiles
and alligators, the front feet partly, the hind feet wholly so.
In general structure they seem to be the most primitive of the
living Crocodilia, and may have been the ancestors of all modern
forms.
202 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
o
'§3
O
o
N
o
c
't/l
u
25
>
O
I
•o
O
O
CROCODILIA 203
The third family, the GaviaHckic, also comprises but two living
species, both restricted in habitat to the rivers of India. Of these
the famed gavial of the (ianges is the better known and the more
highly specialized. The skull of this species has an exceedingly
long and slender snout; the teeth are numerous, small, and slender;
and the feet are more fully webbed than are those of other members
of the order. In habits the gavials are more distinctly aquatic
than are the crocodiles and alligators. They feed almost exclu-
sively upon small fishes, for the seizure and retention of which their
small and sharply pointed teeth are admirably adapted. The
hind feet are relatively long, a character that will be better under-
stood when comparison is made with those of the Thalattosuchia.
Although attaining a large size, fully twenty-five feet in length,
they are comparatively harmless animals, never attacking human
beings or other large animals, as do some of the crocodiles proper.
The gavials have lived a long time in the Indian regions, the
Gangetic gavial itself having been found in deposits of Pleiocene
age, perhaps the oldest known of all living species of air-breathing
vertebrates. Some of the extinct gavials of the same region
attained a length of nearly or quite fifty feet, possibly the longest,
if not the largest, of all swimming reptiles of ancient or modern
times. Extinct gavials have been reported from South America,
but are not yet fully known.
While the fish-eating gavials swallow their prey whole, the
crocodiles, caimans, and alligators prey upon all living animals that
come within their reach, whether large or small, and they will often
leave the water to seize their intended victims, such as pigs, sheep,
birds, or even human beings. Their teeth, as has been already
stated, are much larger, longer, and more irregular in size than
those of the gavials. Their victims are often drawn under the water
and drowned, the peculiar posterior position of the internal nos-
trils permitting the animals to breathe with the mouth and to
firmly hold their prey under water, while the extremity of the snout
and the external nostrils are above the surface.
As the firm, unyielding bony palate, the fixed position and
articulation of the lower jaws, and their rigid attachment to each
other in front do not permit creatures of large size to enter the gullet
204 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
whole, the crocodiles and alligators must tear their food to pieces,
which they do by quick, strong jerks from side to side, aided by the
powerful tail; or they may twist off a limb or some other part of
their victims by a rapid rotation of the whole body, two assisting in
this operation, rotating in opposite directions.
Living crocodiles lay from twenty to sixty eggs, according to the
species; these eggs are sometimes the size of a goose egg, and are
covered with a hard shell. They are laid either in a deep excava-
tion in the sand and covered over by the parent; or under leaves
and straw. The female remains on guard until the eggs are
hatched, of which she is apprized, it is said, by a pecuUar noise
uttered by the partly imprisoned young. She thereupon reopens
the nest, and guides her liberated infants to the water, where she
leaves them to their fate. Whether this remarkable habit is one
that has been acquired in recent times or not is uncertain, but
because it has been observed in a number of unrelated forms, it is
probable that the instinct is of long inheritance, and may account
for certain peculiarities of structure in some of the ancient members
of the order. Doubtless the habit arose because of the unpro-
tected places in which the eggs are necessarily laid on the shores and
beaches, and because the eggs are comparatively so few in number.
The sea-turtles likewise lay their eggs in hollows scooped out of the
sand of the beaches, but the parents give no further care to their
eggs, nor to their newly hatched offspring, a neglect which is com-
pensated for by the much larger number of eggs they lay, because
of which the chances are much greater that a few will survive the
more numerous vicissitudes to which the eggs and young turtles
are exposed.
ANCIENT CROCODILES, MESOSUCHIA
The name Mesosuchia, meaning "middle crocodiles," by which
the ancient members of the Crocodilia have generally been known,
was given by Huxley in the behef that they were intermediate
between the ''true" or modern crocodiles and an ancient group
which he united with the order under the name ''Parasuchia." A
fuller and better knowledge of the members of this last group has
proved very conclusively that they are really less aUied to the croc-
odiles than are some other orders of reptiles, the dinosaurs for
instance, and should be properly classed by themselves as a distinct
CROCODILIA
order. And, more recently, it has
also become quite apparent that the
old crocodiles should not be separated
so widely from the modern ones as
Huxley proposed ; that the dififerences
distinguishing them from the recent
members of the order are really not
of more than family importance. We
thus have left but two chief divisions
of the Crocodilia, the Eusuchia and
Thalattosuchia; and the latter group
even, by some authors, perhaps rightly,
are included under the true crocodiles
as a family only.
These older crocodiles, the Meso-
suchia of Huxley, comprise a con-
siderable number of extinct forms
which lived as far back as the early
part of the Jurassic, and continued
nearly to, if not actually into, Ceno-
zoic time, that is, to the Eocene.
They differ from all living forms,
chiefly in having, not conca\'o-convex
but biconcave backbones, that is, the
more primitive vertebrae with which
all reptiles began. Nor was the inter-
nal opening of the nasal passages so
far back in the mouth as in the later
forms. In other respects they did
not differ very greatly from some of
those now living. All the earliest
kinds that we know of — the teleosaurs
— had a long, slender snout, resem-
bling very much that of the modern
gavials. And they were, for the most
part, incased in a more complete bony
armor, on both the dorsal and the
ventral sides; and the front legs were
205
Fig. 106.-
from above.
-Tclcosaurus; ^kuU,
2o6 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
smaller than those of the gavials even. The resemblance of the
living teleosaurs to the modern gavials must have been very
great, although the heavier bony armor indicates a less exclusively
aquatic life. They probably lived more in the shallow waters of
the seas near the shores.
Near the close of the Jurassic appeared for the first time, so
far as we now know, broad-headed mesosuchian crocodiles, forms
having less numerous and stronger teeth, and resembling closely
modern alligators. It has been beUeved that these broad-headed
kinds were of later origin than the more slender-nosed teleosaurs,
but a moment's consideration will make it evident how improbable
such an evolution must be. The crocodiles must have descended
from strictly terrestrial reptiles, and no terrestrial reptiles have
a slender nose. That they should have acquired a slender face in
adaptation to water habits and then returned to the more primitive
land type with a broad face and less strictly aquatic habits is con-
trary to all our experience in paleontology. From this it is alto-
gether probable that broad-faced crocodiles of later times must
have been the descendants of broad-faced kinds that were in exist-
ence during all the Jurassic times, but of which we as yet have no
knowledge. These broad-faced Jurassic crocodiles were, for the
most part, small creatures, much smaller than the teleosaurs even,
and smaller than any species of crocodiles now hving. Their
remains are known only from fresh- water or shore deposits, and are,
for the most part, associated with those of land and fresh-water
animals. About the time of their first known appearance in geo-
logical history, the small mammals and birds had also become more
or less abundant, and it was suggested by Owen that these land
animals had something to do with the development of the ancient
amphibious crocodiles. Perhaps this was the case with respect to
their greater abundance and development, and with certain pecu-
liarities of their structure, but that the gavial-Uke teleosaurs should
have come back to the land and reverted to a more primitive form
seems quite improbable.
During Cretaceous times, especially in America, numerous forms
of these old mesosuchian crocodiles were doubtless in existence, both
slender-nosed and broad-nosed, and some of them must have been
CROCODILIA 207
of considerable size, though none known was as large as some of
the late crocodiles. This type, with biconcave vertebrae, con-
tinued to live on, in both North and South America, to the latter
part of Cretaceous times, and it is even possible that some con-
tinued on into the Tertiary. But long before the close of the Cre-
taceous, the modern kind appeared, those with concavo-convex
vertebrae, and more posterior internal nostrils. The earliest are
known from New Jersey {Thoracosaiirus, IIolops), so like the Borneo
gavials of today that they are properly classified in the same family,
the Tomistomidae or Gavialidae. If all the later, prococlian type,
that is, those with concavo-convex vertebrae, originated from a
single form when the amphicoelian or mesosuchian type became
extinct, Huxley's classification into the Mesosuchia and Eusuchia
would perhaps be proper, but we have much reason to suppose
that the change in the kinds of vertebra and in the position of
the nostrils was only incidental, and may have occurred in more
than one line of descent, that is, it may have occurred in the broad-
headed kinds of the Jurassic to the broad-headed crocodiles of today,
as also in the gavial-like forms of the Cretaceous to the gavials of
the present. And this is the reason why naturalists no longer
recognize the classification of Huxley, which, partly perhaps because
of the prestige of his name, has so long been accepted in our chief
works on natural history.
MARINE CROCODILES, THALATTOSUCHIA
While the ancient crocodiles of which we have spoken resembled
the modern ones so closely in form of body and probably in habits,
there were certain others of the old Jurassic seas which departed
so widely both in structure and in habits, from their associates that
they are by some authors given a place wholly by themselves
as a distinct group. This has been called by Professor Fraas
the Thalattosuchia, a word meaning "sea-crocodiles." They were
a very early side-branch from the great genealogical tree of the
Crocodilia, a branch which departed so widely from their asso-
ciates in adapting themselves to a pecuhar and aberrant mode of
existence that they cannot be considered as typical crocodiles,
although so closely related to them in other respects that there
2o8 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
;Sy*#'
'5r
1
§
«f
CROCODILIA 20(j
cannot be the least doubt regarding their ancestry. None ol the
crocodiles which we have considered, whether ancient or modern,
can truthfully be called purely aquatic. They never ceased to use
their limbs for locomotion on land, more or less of the time, or for
the support of the body; and many of them have subsisted, in
part at least, on land animals. How easy it may have been for
some of them to become almost wholly emancipated from land
habits we may easily conjecture. The gavials, as we have seen,
are more at home in the water than upon land ; their food is chiefly
found in the water; but, so long as their habits restrict them chiefly
to fresh water, or to the vicinity of the shores, their limbs continue
to be used as much for crawhng as for swimming. Were the gavials
to be driven out to sea by the stress of fresh-water conditions or
attracted thereto by a greater abundance of more easily obtainable
or better food, so far from land that they no longer would have much
use for their legs for the support or propulsion of their bodies,
in the course of time they would doubtless change to a more purely
aquatic type. And in that change there would be material modi-
fications of their structure: their limbs would become better
adapted to movements in the water; the skin would become
smoother, and the bony and horny scales would be lost, since they
would be not only useless in the water, but actually detrimental to
the well-being of the animals; and the tail would develop into a more
powerful organ of propulsion, as a means of increasing their speed
in obtaining food or in escaping their enemies, such as the sharks.
In fact, we can only imagine that in the transformation precisely
those modifications would occur which we actually find in these
old sea-crocodiles, the Thalattosuchia. And they are of especial
interest to us here because nowhere do we find a better example of
Nature in the act of transforming a terrestrial or subterrestrial
animal into a truly aquatic one.
The group comprises only a few forms, so far as known. All
were of modest size among extinct reptiles, from ten to twenty feet
in length, and all are from the Upper Jurassic deposits of Europe.
They did not exist very long, probably because they found it im-
possible to discard old habits and old structures entirely and
become absolutely emancipated from the land; their breeding habits
2IO
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
possibly were too deeply impressed into their structure readily to
change, as did those of other sea-reptiles. Some of their remark-
able aquatic adaptations have long been known, but only within
a dozen years has our knowledge of them become at all complete.
Three or four genera have been described, but only a few forms are
well known, of which Geosaurus may be taken as most typical.
To this we shall confine our descriptions.
The skull of Geosaurus is rather small in comparison with the
length of the body, smaller proportionally than in any living croc-
odile, but not much smaller than that of the teleosaurs. The
snout is long and slender, much like that of the teleosaurs and
gavials, but the bones of the whole upper surface are quite smooth,
not roughened and pitted like those of modern forms. The skull
1
^JLJ lJLUJLlj.liJ-^^h=Mt^'
Fig. io8. — Geosaurus; skull from side and from above. (After Fraas)
of Dakosaurus, another genus of thalattosuchians, is much less
elongate than that of Geosaurus, but has the other characteristics
of Geosaurus. The eyes are provided with a stout ring of sclerotic
bones, with a pupillary opening of less than one inch. We have
seen that all other strictly aquatic reptiles have similar eye bones,
but no other crocodiles have them. The internal openings of the
nostrils are large and long, but they are not situated far back, as in
the modern crocodiles, not even so far back as in the early teleo-
saurs. They had no need of the peculiar breathing apparatus of
the amphibious crocodiles, since all their prey must have been
water-breathing creatures. Their eyes were directed laterally,
not more or less upward, as in their nearest relatives. Nearly all
other crocodiles have an opening through the hind end of the lower
CROCODIUA
21 I
jaw, but the thalattosLichians did not. The teeth were about as
numerous as in the modern gavials, but they projected freely only
a short distance above the gums in life, and they were very slender
and sharply pointed, excellently well adapted for catching smooth
and slipix'ry fishes. Their vertebrae, Hke those of all other reptiles
of their time, were biconcave. Those of the neck resembled those
of the teleosaurs, save that there were only seven, fewer than is the
case with any other members of the order. In becoming adapted
to their peculiar mode of life these crocodiles lost two vertebrae
from the neck. All modern crocodiles have two ribs attached to the
first vertebra; the thalattosaurs had but one, another evidence of
Fig. 109. — Tail, scapula (sc), and coracoid (c) of Geosaurtts. (After Fraas)
primitive characters. While the number of vertebrae in the neck
was reduced, in the back it was increased to eighteen; all other
crocodiles have but fifteen or sixteen. The trunk was long, another
adaptation to water life. There were two firmly united vertebrae
in the sacrum, as in the modern forms. The reason for the per-
sistence of this terrestrial character we shall see later.
The tail was very long and strong, nearly as long as all the
remainder of the body, and relatively much longer than in other
crocodiles. It is of interest to observe that the head, neck, body,
and tail had almost the same relative proportions as those of the
great sea-hzards, the mosasaurs. The terminal bones of the tail
212
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
are very peculiar, and very different from the corresponding bones
of other crocodiles. While the spines of the tail bones along the
anterior part arc only moderately stout and long, and are directed
obliquely backward, near the
terminal part they become
suddenly much broader and
are directed upward, and, a
little farther along, obliquely
forward. The chevron bones
on the under side also here
become broader and longer.
The end of the tail curves
markedly downward to end
in a slender point. It will
be remembered that a similar
downward curvature of the
end of the tail observed in
nearly all specimens of ich-
thyosaurs induced in Owen
the belief that the animals
had a fleshy terminal fm, a
belief which later discoveries
of the carbonized remains of
the flesh confirmed. The
peculiar structures observed
in various specimens of these
sea-crocodiles, even though
no impressions or remains of
the fleshy parts have been
discovered, is quite con-
clusive evidence that these
animals also had a broad,
fleshy, terminal lln. No other explanation of the structure is
possible.
The ribs are not at all stout and are not much curved. They
are directed posteriorly in the known specimens preserved in the
,^.
'^ ^.
Fig. iio. — Gcosaiinis. Elongate hind leg,
and paddle-like front leg. (After Fraas.)
CROCODILIA 213
matrix in such a way as to indicate a slender thorax and
abdomen, not the broad body of the modern crocodiles. The
abdominal ribs, that is, those protecting the region on the
under side of the body between the breast bone and the pelvis,
are strongly developed in Gcosaurus. The sternum, always present
in other crocodiles, is wanting in Gcosaurus. 'J'he shoulder-
blades and coracoids, often changed in shape in water reptiles,
are not unlike those of the amphibious crocodiles, but are smaller
and flatter.
The fore limbs, to use Professor Fraas's words, "are among the
most interesting of all the peculiarities of Gcosaurus,''^ and show very
clearly that these animals were excellent swimmers. The humerus
is remarkably short and broad; the two bones of the forearm, the
radius and ulna, are broad, rounded, or angular plates, not long
bones, as in other crocodiles; the wrist bones also are broad and
plate-like. The three bones of the thumb, that is of the digit which
received most strongly the impact of the water in swimming, are
also broad and flat. All of these bones are marvelously aquatic in
type, as will be evident from a comparison of them with the cor-
responding bones of the ichthyosaurs and mosasaurs. The bones
of the other fingers, however, were not much changed from the
ordinary crocodilian form, as a further comparison of them with the
fingers of a land crocodile will show. Furthermore the whole limb
or paddle was very small in comparison with the hind leg, and it was
attached very near to the head. The relative proportions of the
front and hind limbs in the geosaurs, gavials, and alligators are
instructive as showing the progressive decrease in size of the front
legs from the subaquatic, through the semiaquatic, to the almost
purely aquatic type. The hind legs, strangely enough, were not
very dift'erent in size and structure from those of the gavials or teleo-
saurs. The thigh bone is long and slender, though the bones of the
leg and ankle are somewhat shortened and flattened, as are also
those of the first toe. There were no claws on the hind feet, a
distinctly aquatic adaptation, and the toes were certainly webbed.
The pelvis, while not especially stout, is of good size, and was firmly
attached to the sacrum.
214 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
Perhaps all these characters may best be summed up in the
words of Professor Fraas, as translated:
We recognize in Geosaurus an unusually slenderly built crocodile, in
appearance very different from all true crocodiles. The smooth, rounded
skull, with its greatly elongated and slender snout, and the deep-lying, small
eyes, reminds one most of the ichthyosaurs. The skull merges into the slender,
elongated trunk without a visible neck, and the body was provided neither
above nor below with horny or bony armor, but was, probably, as in the whales,
covered with a smooth, soft skin. The anterior extremities, attached far
forward, are developed as paddles, and served rather as organs of equilibration
than as a means of propulsion, which was the function of the elongated hind
legs and the extraordinarily strong and powerful tail, which supported at its
end a large fin. The entire impression given of the animal is that of an excellent
swimmer, with all the peculiar aquatic adaptations. In the skeleton, however,
all the characters of the original crocodiles are preserved. Most remarkable
are the laterally placed eyes, protected by the stout sclerotic bones, and the
overhanging bones of the orbits. So, too, the large temporal openings of the
skull, doubtless due to the absence of the bony plates in the integument, give
to the animal a strangely abnormal appearance for a crocodile.
We have observed that all the truly aquatic air-breathing ani-
mals, save the plesiosaurs, have either lost the hind legs or else
have them greatly reduced in size, and the disproportionately large
size of these members in Geosaurus seems inexplicable. But an
explanation is not, I think, hard to find. In the adaptation to
water life the first to become modified for the control of the body are
the front legs. The hind legs never have any really important use
when the tail is a powerful propeller. The hind legs of the geosaurs
are still essentially legs and not paddles, and they were doubtless
used either occasionally for propulsion on land, or perhaps for
pushing the body about on the bottom of shallow waters. And the
presence of a well-developed ventral armor of bony ribs possibly
also indicates more or less of the terrestrial crawHng habit. As
soon as the hind legs cease to be used for crawling they take on only
a feeble use for the equilibration of the body, and speedily become
small, until finally they disappear. That the hind legs of these
creatures were of some use in the water is certain, because of the
modifications in their structure, and especially because of the loss
of the claws; but that they were of important use as propellers is
CROCODILIA 21 s
hardly probable. We may therefore infer that the thalattosu-
chians, while distinctively sea-reptiles, had not entirely lost their
land habits. Moreover, it is highly probable that their egg-laying
habits, which would hardly change with a greater adaptation to
water life, compelled the animals recurrently to visit the shores.
To have finally lost their hind legs they must have become vivip-
arous in habit, since it seems to be impossible for any true air-
breathers to be hatched in water. Perhaps this insurmountable
habit was the final cause of their extinction in competition with the
truly viviparous aquatic flesh-eaters. The thalattosuchians had
but a brief existence in geological history, during the latter part of
the Jurassic period only, so far as certainly known, nor did they
become widely dispersed over the earth; they are known from
Europe, possibly from Brazil.
CHAPTER XVI
CHELONIA
No order of reptiles of the past or present is more sharply and
unequivocally distinguished from all others than the Chelonia
or Testudinata. No order has had a more uniformly continuous
and uneventful history. None now in existence has had a longer
known history, and of none is the origin more obscure. The first
known members of the order, in Triassic times, were turtles in all
respects, as well or nearly as well adapted for their peculiar mode
of life as are those now living, and were they now living they would
attract no especial attention from the ordinary observer and but
little from the naturahst. From time to time some have gone
after better things, and have come to grief, but the main line has
remained with fewer improvements, fewer evolutional changes,
than any other group of higher vertebrates. The turtles seem
very early to have adapted themselves so well to their peculiar
mode of life, to have intrenched themselves so thoroughly in their
own province, that no other creatures have been able to overcome
them, or to drive them from it. The remains of no other air-
breathing vertebrates are so omnipresent in the rocks as those of
the turtles; they may be expected wherever fossils of air-breathing
animals are found, though unfortunately often only in scattered
and broken fragments. The loose union of their skeletal bones
and their general habits of life in shallow waters left their bodies
as food for scavengers, or for dismemberment by the tides and
currents.
Relationships with other reptiles they really have none. Some
have thought that the plesiosaurs were their first cousins, others
the Placodontia, an indeterminate group of extinct reptiles usually
placed with the Anomodontia. But their relationship with neither
of these is closer than with the crocodiles, dinosaurs, or ptero-
dactyls. They are the only reptiles that we know, besides the
216
CIIELONIA 217
cotylosaurs, which have no holes in the temporal roof of the skull,
and as the cotylosaurs were the most primitive and the oldest of
reptiles, this fact incontestably proves that the turtles had a very
ancient origin, though we know them no farther back than the
later Triassic. They are the only order of reptiles of which not
a single member is known to have teeth, or even vestiges of
them. Until recently only a single specimen has been known
from the Trias, and of that only the casts of the shell; but the
shell was as fully developed and as complete as that of a modern
alligator snapper, which it resembled much in form and in size.
And doubtless the habits of this ancient Proganochelys were similar
to those of the alligator snapper. The early cotylosaurian reptiles
were all littoral- or marsh-loving animals, and more or less aquatic,
and doubtless the early turtles continued in the same environments
and with the same habits after acquiring a shell for protection and
losing their teeth, which for some inexplicable reason they seemed
no longer to need. Until near the close of the Jurassic period
probably all turtles were amphibious animals of the marshes,
spending much, perhaps the larger part, of the time in the water,
good swimmers, and yet good crawlers. With the beginning of
the Cretaceous, however, some of them became ambitious for new
and untried modes of life. Various ones went down into the sea
and became marine animals, reaching the zenith of their prosperity
and the maximum of size before the close of the period, but con-
tinuing in diminished size and numbers to the present time, if
we may consider the leather-back turtle as really their descendant.
Others in the Cretaceous took to the rivers and ponds, and became
almost as thoroughly aquatic in their thin shape and soft covering;
and their lineal descendants still continue in the rivers of the
Northern Hemisphere. Still others, in the Age of Mammals, took
to the upland, and competed with the mammals in the open places
and prairies, reaching their maximum in Miocene-Pliocene times,
when for some unknown reason the giants among them were driven ,
from the mainlands to continue a precarious existence to the present
time in some of the larger islands.
Were there no turtles living we should look upon the fossil
forms as among the strangest of all vertebrate animals — animals
2l8
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
which had developed the strange habit of conceahng themselves
inside of their ribs, for that is literally what the turtles do. The
box or shell of an ordinary turtle is composed of the backbones and
ribs, to which are soldered a shell of bony skin plates above, with
the clavicles, interclavicle, and ventral ribs below. Except in
Fig. Ill
Fig. h2
Figs, hi and 112. — Graptemys. (From Hay)
Fig. III. — Carapace: cpi, cpi, etc., costal plates; csi, cs2, etc., costal scutes,
horny; «i, »2, etc., neural bones; imp, nuchal bone; nus, nuchal scute; py, pygal
bone; 5/>y, suprapygal; 5/»y 2, second suprapygal, or postneural; d5I, ».y2, etc., verte-
bral scutes; i, 2, 3-12 on right side, marginal scutes; i, 2, 3-12 on left side, peripheral
bones.
Fig. 112. — Plastron: ab, abdominal scutes; a)i, anal scutes; ent, entoplastron
(interclavicle); cpi, epiplastron (clavicle); fern, femoral scute; g, gular scute; hum,
humeral scute; hyo, hypoplastron bone; hypo, hypoplastron ; in, inguinal scute;
py, pygal bone; xiph, xiphiplastron.
the strange leather-back turtle described farther on, these plates
form definite series. Ten of them cover the spines of the dorsal
vertebrae, in the midhne, one over each, of which the turtles have
the smallest number of any known reptiles. There are eight on
each side over the ribs, united by suture with each other and with
the middle series; and, in addition, there are twenty-six bones
CIIELONIA
219
surrounding them and attached to I hem. All these hcjnes com-
pose what is called the carapace, which forms a complete roof in
the more terrestrial types, more or less imperfect, with vacuities
between the bones in the marine forms. On the under side, in
addition to the clavicles and the interclavicle. there are three
pairs of enlarged ventral ribs that go to form the plastron, solid
and complete in land turtles, with openings in the water forms.
And in the land forms
the plastron is more or
less lirmly united with
the carapace.
In the skeleton con-
tained within the box
thus formed is the very
pecuHar pectoral girdle,
composed of scapula
and coracoid, the scap-
ula so peculiar that
the controversy as to
its homologies is not
yet quite settled. Most
authors, until recently,
have believed that its peculiar shape (Fig. 113) is due to the
co-ossitication of the procoracoid with the scapula instead of as
usual its loss or union with the true coracoid, so called. We are
now pretty sure that this is not true, since in reality there is no
such bone as the procoracoid, the bone so called being the real or
true coracoid; and because, in the second place, the long anterior
projection called the procoracoid is really only an outgrowth of the
scapula itself and not a fused, separate bone. Hence the bone is
properly called the scapula-proscapula, and not the scapula pro-
coracoid, as it usually has been. The coracoids are elongate and
flattened and without the usual supracoracoid foramen, so gener-
ally present in reptiles. The only other reptiles having a simi-
lar structure of the scapula are the plesiosaurs, and it has been
because of this apparent resemblance that some good paleontologists
Fig. 113. — Toxochelys; coracoid and scapula
220 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
have thought the turtles and plesiosaurs were allied. The sacrum
is composed of two vertebrae only, and the pelvis of the usual
three bones, the ilium, the ischium, and the pubis, all covered over
by the shell.
In every known turtle the neck is composed invariably of eight
vertebrae, but they are peculiar in many respects. In the earliest
known turtles the neck vertebrae were, as would be supposed,
biconcave, but they soon became very variable in all; in each neck
some are biconcave, some
biconvex, some opisthocoe-
lous, and some procoelous.
And Dr. Hay tells us that
the neck has increased in
length in the later forms.
The skull also is very
peculiar in that it has
some very primitive char-
acters and others very
aberrant. The temporal
roof, as has been said, has
no holes through it, though
it is often reduced by the
emargination of the
borders, whether from be-
low or behind, until in
some the whole temporal
region is exposed, and not
at all covered over. There
is no parietal foramen, so
constantly present in all the early reptiles and in the lizards and
the tuatera of modern times. There are no teeth or vestiges of
teeth, but the jaws have usually a horny cutting edge, which seems
to be quite as serviceable; in the river turtle the lips are fleshy.
There is no transverse or transpalatine bone. There is a single
vomer only, not paired as in other reptiles, whence comes the
doubtful theory that the vomers of other reptiles are not the real
vomers originally so named in mammals, and hence often called
Fig. [114. — Pelvis of C/iclonc, from below
/»«, pubis: /^, ischium; ?/, ilium (in acetabulum)
CIIELQNIA
221
prevomcrs. The vomer of the turtles under this theory is beheved
to be the real homologue of the mammaUan bone. The i")ahite is
always sHghtly, sometimes nearly wholly, underfloored, as in mam-
mals, carrying the internal nostrils far back in the mouth. In the
occipital region of the skull there is a separate bone on each side
called the paroccipital or opisthotic, which has been indistinguish-
ably fused with the exoccipital in all other reptiles except the ich-
thyosaurs since Triassic times.
prnx
ju.
Fig. II 5;
Fig. 116
Figs. 115 and 116. — Trachemys. (From Hay)
Fig. 115. — Skull from above: fr, frontal; jii, jugal; pa, parietal; paoc, paroc-
cipital; pfr, prefrontal; pof, postfrontal; pro, prootic; qu, quadrate; sq, squamosal;
soc, supraoccipital.
Fig. 116. — Skull from below: alv, alveolar surface of maxilla; hoc, basioccipital;
bap, basisphenoid; cxoc, exoccipital; w.v, maxilla; pal, palatine; paoc, paroccipital;
pmx, premaxilla; pro, prootic; pt, pterygoid; qu, quadrate; qj, quadra tojugal;
sq, squamosal; vom, vomer.
In the feet the numbers of phalanges — that is, the bones of the
free digits^ — are like those of mammals, that is, two in the first
and three in each of the other four digits. The land tortoises have
lost some of these, while the river turtles have either gained one
or two in the fourth finger and fourth toe. or else have enjoyed
an uninterrupted descent from the primitive reptiles which normally
222
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
possessed that number. All other reptiles, save those phylogeneti-
cally allied to the primitive mammals, that is, the Theriodontia
and their allies, have normally the phalangeal formula 2, 3, 4, 5, 4,
It was partly because of this similarity of the numbers of toe bones
that the turtles have been classed in the great group of reptiles
that includes the ancestors of the mammals; that is, under this
theory, the turtles would enjoy a nearer relationship to the mam-
mals and to man himself than any other hving reptiles! But this
classification has been shown to be quite artificial.
Fig. 117. — Limbs of Colpochelys, a recent sea-turtle: H, humerus; R, radius;
U, ulna; r, radiale; i, intermedium; u, ulnare; /», pisiform; c, centrale; T, tibia;
F, fibula; a, astragalus; tn, fifth metatarsal. (From Wieland.)
From what has been said, it will be surmised that the Chclonia
represent in themselves one of the primary subdivisions of the class
Reptilia, and that, unlike most others, the order has enjoyed a most
remarkable longevity. And doubtless they are one of the primary
branches of the reptihan stock, which has remained distinct since
Permian times at least, if not since Carboniferous, isolated and
remarkably homogeneous, giving off no branches which departed
far from the main stock, and on the whole leading a singularly
placid existence for ten or more million years.
In most textbooks the order Chelonia is divided into three
suborders, the Pleurodira, the Cryptodira, and the Trionychoidea.
CIIELONIA 223
In recent years, however, the earlier members of the older group
of Pleurodira have been separated into a fourth suborder, the
Amphichelydia, a group characterized by some not very impor-
tant differences in the plastron and skull, and including those
forms in which the cervical vertebrae are amphicoelous. This
group continued to Eocene times before it became extinct, and
consisted of archaic forms which persisted after all the other sub-
orders had come into existence. The Cryptodira, especially char-
acterized by the manner in which they withdraw the head and neck
within the shell by an S-like vertical flexure, are known from the
Lower Jurassic and are still the dominant group of today, with more
than one hundred and forty living species. The Pleurodira in the
narrower sense are first known from their remains in the Upper
Cretaceous of North America and are still represented by about
forty species, living in the Southern Hemisphere. They are dis-
tinguished from the other groups by the manner in which they with-
draw the neck and head into the shell, by a horizontal, sidewise
flexure. The third suborder, the Trionychoidea, also began in
Cretaceous times, so far as we know, and are represented by about
seventy living species, chiefly in the Northern Hemisphere. They
are especially characterized by the absence of bony marginal
plates and the soft epidermis.
With the exception of the land tortoises, all turtles from the
beginning of their career as an order to the present time have been
more or less at home in the water. In some, like the marine forms,
the adaptation to aquatic life has produced marked changes in
structure: in the loss of the horny dermal shields and in the loss
of bone tissue; in the flattening of the shell, and in the development
of the front legs into swimming flippers, with a loss of the claws.
In the absence of a guiding tail, which is always small in the marine
turtles, propulsion must of course be wholly by the aid of the limbs.
As oar propellers the marine turtles show some of the peculiar
characters of the plesiosaurs. With a like short and broad body,
a more or less elongated and flexible neck, there could be no sinuos-
ity of the body in swimming. As an oar-like organ the humerus
became flattened, and its muscular attachments, as in the plesio-
saurs, descended far down the shaft, giving greater mechanical
224 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
advantage. Unlike all other aquatic vertebrates, the turtles never
developed real hyperphalangy. Only in the river turtles is there a
possibility of an increase in the bones of the fourth digit.
To discuss in general the structure and habits of the living
chelonians would extend this chapter to an undue length, and would
add nothing to the many excellent works on natural history
accessible to the student. We have therefore contented ourselves
with a brief outline of the geological history of the order, with
especial reference to their aquatic habits.
SIDE-NECKED TURTLES. PLEURODIRA
The suborder of Chelonia, generally known as the snake-necked
or side-necked turtles or tortoises, comprises about forty living spe-
cies, confined to South America, Africa save the northernmost part.
Madagascar, New Guinea, and Australia. In Australia they are
the only members of the order known — another instance of the
peculiar isolation of the fauna of that region. In the past they
lived in North America during Upper Cretaceous times, the earliest
known forms of the group in its restricted sense, of which seven
species are described by Hay. In Eocene times they are also
known from Europe and Asia, from both of which regions they have
long since disappeared.
The Pleurodira, as the term indicates, are easily distinguished
from all other turtles by the way in which they withdraw the head
within the shell. Instead of withdrawing it by an S-shaped flexure
of the neck between the shoulder-blades, as do other turtles, these
bend the neck laterally in a horizontal plane, bringing the head
within the margins of the shell in front of one or the other foreleg;
and the margins of the shell are produced here in an eave-hke
fashion for the greater protection of the head. In the structure of
the shell, which is always fully developed into a box, these turtles
do not differ very much from the Cryptodira, though there may be
some extra bones in the plastron, as also in the skull. The nasal
bones are always, the lacrimals sometimes, well developed; the latter
never, the former rarely, found in other groups. The lower jaws
articulate a little differently, and the external ear is always fully
surrounded by bone. Very characteristic is the bony union of the
ClIEWNIA 225
pelvis with the plastron below, which never occurs in other turtles,
unless it be the Amphichelydia.
The side-necked turtles are all of fresh-water habit, similar to
that of the fresh-water tortoises spoken of farther on. The neck
is often very long and snake-like, which accounts for one of the
names given to these turtles; because it is withdrawn into the
shell sidewise, it has more distinctively ball-and-socket joints
between the vertebrae, with distinct transverse processes for the
attachment of the necessary side-moving muscles. The feet in all
are more or less webbed and armed with strong claws.
The largest and perhaps the best known of all living side-
necked turtles is the giant Amazon turtle of South America, which
sometimes has a shell nearly three feet in length. Its feet are
broadly webbed, and the shell is rather flat in the adult; it is an
excellent swimmer in the waters of the Orinoco and Amazon. Six
or seven species of the genus to which it belongs are known, all
of them South American except one that lives in Madagascar
and one fossil found in the Eocene of India. This remarkable
distribution is but one more of the many instances known in
zoology and paleontology that seem to prove an early land con-
nection between India and South America. Had the migration
between the two continents occurred by way of Asia and Bering
straits, as did that of hosts of mammals, one would certainly expect
to find some evidence of it in the North American Tertiary rocks,
which, so far, is lacking.
CRYPTODIRA
The chief famihes of the Cryptodira turtles are the Chelydridae,
or snappers; the Emydidae, or marsh tortoises; the Testudinidae,
or land tortoises; the Chelonidae, or sea- turtles; the Protostegidae,
or ancient sea-turtles; and the Dermochelydidae, or leather-backs.
Other doubtful or smaller groups, both living and extinct, may be
omitted, or incidentally mentioned.
SNAPPING TURTLES
The family of snapping turtles, the Chelydridae, are of interest
because of their pecuHar geographical distribution at the present
226 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
time. Only four species are known, three of them from North
America, the fourth from New Guinea. The family is one of the
most primitive of living turtles, though no members of it are known
with certainty from earlier rocks than the Oligocene. In all prob-
ability, also, they have retained, more than have any other group
of turtles, unless it be some of the fresh-water tortoises, the primi-
tive habits of the earlier or earliest turtles, though of course there
have been modifications, both in structure and in habits. The
three species of the United States include two of the snapping
turtles proper and the alligator turtles of the southern states,
which sometimes reach a length of three feet. All the species are
largely aquatic in habit, powerful and active swimmers, with
webbed feet and strong claws, and both on the land and in the
water they are bold and fierce. They have a relatively large head
and very strong jaws. Agassiz saw one bite off a piece of a plank
an inch in thickness, and they can usually be raised from the ground
by any object which they seize. The carapace and plastron are
much reduced, and are rather loosely united. The shell is not
large enough for the complete withdrawal of the head and legs
within it, and the tail is unusually large and strong. The common
snapping turtle, Chelydra serpentina, is found from Canada to Ecua-
dor, and its remains have been found with those of the mammoth
and mastodon in Pleistocene deposits; and related species of the
same genus have been reported from the Miocene of England.
FRESH-WATER OR MARSH TORTOISES
The family of turtles or tortoises (Emydidae) represented at
the present time by the common terrapin, painted tortoise, and
box tortoise of the United States, and commonly called fresh-
water turtles or tortoises, comprises the largest group of living
chelonians — nearly a third of all existing members of the order.
They are widely distributed over all parts of the earth except
Australia, and are of very varied habits. Some are almost exclu-
sively aquatic; others, like the painted tortoise, are partially so-
while others, especially the common box tortoise, are almost as
exclusively terrestrial as the true land tortoises, dying even, if
forced to live long in water.
CIIELONIA 227
The shell in the more aquatic forms is depressed or flattened,
but in the terrestrial kinds may be as highly arched as in the true
land tortoises. The feet are adapted primarily for walking, but
nearly always have the toes webbed, and the digits are longer
than are those of the land tortoises. Only the two or three middle
toes have claws. Some species have developed hinges in the plas-
tron, whereby they may be completely closed up after the head
and legs are withdrawn within the shell. Most of the species are
carnivorous in habit, but a few, hke the box tortoise, are strictly
vegetarian.
Geologically the fresh-water tortoises have a not very ancient
history, going back no farther than do the land tortoises, that is,
to the beginning of the Cenozoic or Age of Mammals. Fully
fifty species are known from the Tertiary rocks of North America,
or more than three-fourths as many as are now living upon the
earth.
The family at most can be said to be only amphibious in habit,
and has no striking aquatic adaptations, since the shell is well
developed and is covered with horny shields. The flattened shell
of the more aquatic forms is characteristic, as is also the greater
degree of webbing between the toes.
L.^ND TORTOISES
Perhaps the last of the more noteworthy specializations of the
Chelonia, and indeed among the last of the more important speciali-
zations of the Reptilia, are the upland tortoises, of which the com-
mon "gopher" of the southern states is almost the only remnant
in North America. They formed a part of the great hegira of
forest and marsh animals to the open prairies, away from the low-
lands and water which the turtles had inhabited almost exclu-
sively for millions of years.
They began their career, Dr. Hay thinks, at about the begin-
ning of the Cenozoic, that is, with the great development of the
mammals, and reached the maximum of their development in the
Miocene; and they have been on the decline ever since. In the
Northern Hemisphere, at least, the slowly cooling climate through-
out the Eocene, and a decided decrease in moisture, brought about
228
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
the prairies and prairie plants before its close. Just as the horses,
rhinoceroses, camels, and other herbivorous mammals took to these
open places for the better and more abundant food found therein,
so also the lowland tortoises found better food and fewer enemies
there, for they are all strictly herbivorous in habit. The mammals
became more conspicuous to their enemies when they went into
the open, and it was only by the development of speed, more sober
coloration, and perhaps greater cunning that they found safety
from them. The tortoises were handicapped by low intelligence,
and they could not develop speed, for they were not constructed to
Fig. ii8. — Tesludo sumeirei, a giant upland tortoise. (From Hay, after Roth-
schild.)
that end. But they did find protection in their bony shell, which
became thicker, higher, and more convex, and with smaller open-
ings. To quote Dr. Hay: "We may suppose that it would be
much more difficult for a carnivorous animal to effect an entrance
into such a shell than into one depressed, and whose borders may
be spanned by the jaws of their enemies." Perhaps also the highly
arched form of the shell gave greater capacity for the lungs, and
the tortoises in general, it is said, do have better lung capacity
than the more aquatic or lowland types of turtles. Possibly, also,
the heavier shell lessened the evaporation of the body fluids, and
made the tortoises less dependent upon the vicinity of water.
CIIELONIA 229
Certain it is that the common box tortoise, of like form and habits,
occurs not rarely on the arid phuns, far from water.
The neck and legs became fully retractile within the shell;
the digits were shortened up, without a vestige of webbing mem-
brane between them; the phalanges were reduced in number to two
in each toe, and nearly all the toes have well-formed claws. The
feet are placed squarely upon the ground, and the body is elevated
in walking. They can swim, when by accident they are thrown
into the water, only as any terrestrial mammal can.
About forty species of land tortoises are known throughout
the world at the present time, though North America, the probable
original home of the tribe, has but three, all small. The larger
species are all now denizens of islands, especially the Galapagos
Islands, where the giant tortoises have long been famous. And
many of our living forms have changed but little since Eocene
times. In the Oligocene and Miocene they inhabited western
North America in enormous numbers. In the Bad Lands of South
Dakota one can often see the remains of a dozen or more of these
giant tortoises at one time, specimens varying from one to three
feet in length of shell. In river deposits, those of the late Miocene
or early Pliocene, the writer has seen areas of an acre or more
literally strewn with their remains, as though droves of them had
been overwhelmed and perished together. About fifty species of
these land tortoises are known from the American Tertiary, thirty-
two of them belonging to the modern genus Testudo, which com-
prises the giant tortoises of the Galapagos. The largest known
species of the group is one of Testudo from the Pliocene of India,
which had a shell six feet in length. Why the larger species became
extinct in PHocene times on the mainland to survive only in the
islands is not known; possibly their carnivorous enemies became
too cunning and too numerous.
SEA-TURTLES. CHELONIDAE
The sea-turtles, or Chelonidae comprise five or six living species,
inhabitants for the most part of tropical and subtropical oceans,
of which the green or edible turtle (Chelone), the hawksbill turtle
230
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
{Caretta), and the loggerhead {Erctmochelys [Fig. 119]) are the best
known. They are all thoroughly aquatic in habit, and of large
size, from three to five feet in length. The carapace is heart-
shaped, and reduced, that is, with large openings between the
ribs; the plastron also is reduced and loosely united to the carapace.
The neck is short and the head is not retractile within the shell.
The temporal region of the skull is roofed over. The four legs
form large and powerful flippers, and the hind legs are relatively
small. The body is flattened and the tail is small. The aquatic
Fig. 119. — Erctmochelys, loggerhead turtle. (By permission of the New York
Zoological Society.)
characters of the limbs are seen especially in the broad and strong
humerus, with the radial crest for the attachment of powerful
muscles situated far down on the shaft; in the relative shortness
of the radius and ulna, and the large size of the latter bone; in the
flattened carpal bones; and in the great elongation of the digits
and the absence of all but one or two of the claws. Unlike the
leather-back turtle and the Cretaceous sea-turtles, the carapace
and plastron are completely covered with horny shields, from which
indeed the tortoise shell of commerce is derived. Except the green
turtle, all members of the family are carnivorous.
CHELONIA
231
Extinct members of the family arc known from scanty remains
in Cenozoic and late Cretaceous rocks. From the earher Cretaceous
deposits of the plains more primitive allied forms occur, often
classed in distinct families of which Toxochelys (Fig. 120) and
Desmaiochelys are the more noteworthy. The latter genus, espe-
cially, might well have
been an ancestor of all
the modern forms.
About three feet in
length, it had all the
essential characteristics
of the sea-turtles, in its
thin form, roofed-over
skull, reduced carapace,
loose plastron, and
flipper-like limbs. The
single known speci-
men, preserved in the
museum of the Uni-
versity of Kansas, came
from the lower rocks of
the Upper Cretaceous
of Nebraska. Yet
earlier, at the close of
the Jurassic, there were
shore turtles of con-
siderable size that had begun to develop a fondness for the open
seas; to acquire a depressed form and lightened shell, the Hmbs
still retaining, however, more of the terrestrial or crawling form.
They are grouped as a separate family, the Thalassemydae, and
include the first of the Chelonia to depart from the marsh and
fresh-water habits which for long ages, perhaps, had limited the
activities and evolution of the turtles.
Fig. 120. — Carapace of Toxochelys bauri, an
Upper Cretaceous sea-turtle: ep, epineural. (After
Wieland.)
ANCIENT SEA-TURTLES. PROTOSTEGIDAE
Forty-four years ago the late Professor E. D. Cope, one of the
greatest naturalists America has ever produced, in almost the
232
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
earliest exploration of the great Cretaceous fossil deposits of western
Kansas, discovered and collected a remarkable specimen of one
,.^^^*"^^
.yy
^
^ -/
*^
Fig. 121. — Toxochelys latircmis; front leg: /now, humerus; raJ, radius; «/, ulna;
iiit, intermedium; iiht, ulnare; p, pisiform; cen, centrale. (From Wieland.)
Fig. 122. — Desmatochelys lowii: skull from above and below
of the most extraordinar\- turtles that is known even yet. By an
error somewhat natural for those times, when the theory of evolu-
tion was just beginning to attain acceptance by naturalists, he
CHELONIA
233
thought that the specimen, notwithstanding its monstrous size,
represented a very primitive kind of turtle, and gave to it the name
Protostcga gigas, meaning gigantic first roof! The late Professor
George Baur, to whom paleontology owes so much, showed that,
far from being a primitive turtle, Protostega was really one of
the most specialized types of the order. Professor Cope's account
of the discovery of the specimen is of so much interest that it
may be quoted here:
"In the very young tortoise or turtle the ribs are separate, as
in other animals. As they grow older they begin to expand at the
upper side of the upper end, and with increased age the expansion
extends throughout the length. The ribs first come in contact
where the process commences, and in the land tortoise they are
united at the end. In the sea-turtles the union ceases a little
above the ends. The fragments of the Protostega were seen by
one of the men projecting from a ledge of a low bluff. After
several square feet of rock had been removed, we cleared up the
floor and found ourselves well repaid. Many long, slender pieces
of two inches in width lay upon the ledge. They were evidently
ribs, with the usual heads, but behind each head was a plate like
the flattened bowl of a huge spoon, placed crosswise. Beneath
these stretched two broad plates, two feet in width, and no thicker
than binder's board. The edges were fingered and the surface
was hard and smooth. All this was quite new, among fully grown
animals. Some bones of a large paddle were recognized, and a
leg bone. The shoulder-blade of a huge tortoise came next, and
further examination showed that we had stumbled on the burial
place of the largest species of sea-turtle yet known. But the ribs
were those of an ordinary turtle just hatched, and the great plates
represented the bony deposit in the skin, which, commencing
independently in modern turtles, unite with each other at an early
day. But it was incredible that the largest of known turtles should
be but just hatched, and for this and other reasons it has been con-
cluded that this 'ancient mariner' is one of those forms, not un-
common in old days, whose incompleteness in some respects points
to the truth of the belief that animals have assumed their modern
perfection by a process of growth from more simple beginnings."
234
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
Later studies by Doctors G. Baur, E. C. Case, O. P. Hay, and
especially G. R. Wieland, of the abundant and excellent material,
preserved in the museums of Yale and Kansas universities and
the Carnegie Institution, and especially the discovery by Wieland
in 1895 of an allied and yet larger form which he called Archelon,
have determined practically every detail of the structure of this
remarkable group of sea-turtles. A surprisingly complete speci-
men of Archelon is mounted in the museum of Yale University.
Fig. 123. — Archelon ischyros; skeleton from above: n, nuchal, r, r, r, ribs; m, m,
peripheral bones; h, humerus; r, radius; n, ulna; /, tibia; fi, fibula. (From Wieland.)
About a half-dozen species and two genera of the family have
so far been described, all coming from the Upper Cretaceous
deposit of Kansas and South Dakota, the genus Archelon from later
rocks than those which have yielded Prolostega.
The general form and structure of Archelon will best be under-
stood from the accompanying figures after Wieland (Figs. 123,
124, 125) and the restoration of the living animal as interpreted
by the writer (Fig. 126). If the leather-back turtle, described
CIIELONIA
235
farther on, is really the descendant of these or allied turtles, as many
authors believe, it of course represents the very highest aquatic
specialization of all Chelonians. If, on the other hand, as some
beheve, the leather-back is the end of a long and independent line
of descent, then Archclon represents the highest aquatic specializa-
tion of all other turtles.
In size, at least, Archclon attained the maximum of the order,
reaching a length of more than twelve feet, and a weight of more
Fig. 124. — ylrc/ze/o?? from below, without plastron: /r, humerus; r, radius; «, ulna;
sc, scapula; c, coracoid; p, pubis; i, ischium. (From Wieland.)
than three tons. Except that the shell was not heart-shaped or
elongated as in all modern sea-turtles, but nearly circular in out-
line, it had all the aquatic adaptations of the sea-turtle in a yet
higher degree.
The shell was depressed; the dermal plates covering the ribs
had almost entirely disappeared, remnants only of their upper
ends remaining; the skull (Fig. 127) had the temporal region
wholly roofed over; the neck was short and not retractile. The
236
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
front legs were strong flippers, the humerus was long and stout,
with the crest for the attachment of muscles far down on the
shaft; the digits were greatly elongated and clawless, etc. The
plastron only was less reduced than in the case of the modern sea-
turtles. No traces of horny shields have been discovered. As to
the nature of the covering and the general appearance of the
Fig. 125. — Archelon; skeleton from below: Av, hyoplastron ; A/»/>, hypoplastron.
(From Wieland.)
turtle when alive, Dr. Wieland has kindly given the writer his
views, as follows:
''After direct study or fairly close examination of all the fossil
material of importance thus far collected representing the Pro-
tostegidae, it seems certain that in all the members of the group
an external leathery layer was well developed. In no instance is
there the slightest trace of horny shield sulci, or grooves; though
it seems probable that there was some gradation toward a thin and
perhaps even slightly horny hide. In Archelon ischyros the re-
duced condition of the carapace and the presence of the continuous
CIIKLOXIA
237
d
■5
3
o
■/)
3
O
lU
u
Ut
a,
a
0)
'Sb
I
I
238 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
row of large, median, supraneural elements render it quite certain
that there was a development of leathery hide comparable to
that of Dcrmochclys. The same may be said of Protostega gigas.
But Archelon Marshii had a less reduced carapace, and the leathery
skin was probably less well developed; and Protostega Co pel, in
which no trace of supraneurals remains, must have made some
approach to the horn-shield condition. A more distinct suggestion
of transition from the leathery to the horny shield covering may be
seen in the very different contemporary Cretaceous form, Toxo-
chelys Bauri, where ossified cpi- or supraneurals occupy quite
Fig. 127. — Skull of Archelon ischyros: pa, parietal; /, frontal; pm, premaxilla;
/>/, prefrontal; />(/", postfrontal; w, maxilla,/, jugal; jj, quadratojugal; 5J' ulTer
tolerably certain conjectures. In the opinion of the writer, the less
reduced plastron indicates a bottom-feeding habit, a view that is
strengthened by the more rounded form of the shell, like that
of the river turtle. All in all it would seem that Protoslega and
Archelon lived habitually on the soft bottoms of the shallower seas,
feeding upon the hordes of large shell-fish, for which their powerful
parrot-hke beak was admirably adapted. That the species of Prolo-
stega did not commonly frequent the deeper oceans is indicated by
the general absence of their remains in the deeper water deposits.
The writer, in a long collecting experience, always found their
remains associated with those of the smaller Toxochelys, toothed
birds, pterodactyls, and the smaller mosasaurs.
Perhaps no one can speak more authoritatively as to the habits
of these gigantic sea-turtles of the Cretaceous than Dr. Wieland:
''With regard to the general habits and appearance of Archelon
much might doubtless be said if the present-day sea-turtles were
more familiar objects. Dr. Hay thought that Archelon ischyros
was a clumsy or even a sluggish, mainly littoral animal, moving
slowly about the bottom of quiet inlets in quest of shell-fish; I, on
the contrary, much struck by the powerful flippers, and especially
by the flattening of the humerus, with its low radial crest and obvi-
ously strong musculature, have held that unusual swimming power
and adaptation to a strictly marine life were indicated. Perhaps,
as usual where experts differ, it is probable that both views are in
part correct, and that Archelon was only a moderately good swim-
mer. It may be noted that, notwithstanding the almost circular
body, the femoral notch, that for the hind leg, lies far back, so that it
is not necessary, on the score of bulk, to assume slowness of motion,
or the inability to pursue a sea-going life. Furthermore, it is now
known that the development of the digits fell httle short of that
seen in Colpochelys (Fig. 117) or Eretmochelys, truly marine turtles.
''Therefore, while there can be no doubt that Archelon was
strictly carnivorous in habit, and well able to navigate the open
240 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
seas, it is not likely that it fed on other than relatively slow-moving
prey. Lydekker looked upon the broad mandibles and broad
palate of Lytoloma as specializations for a mussel diet; and very
similarly in Archclon, while the decurved beak would easily trans-
form him into a most formidable enemy, the heavy premaxillaries
and vomer, and the flat but deep lower jaw, suggest an adept
crusher of crustaceans. The presence of vast quantities of Nautilus
dekayl, which I found accompanying one of the specimens, was
doubtless accidental, but it plainly suggests that this cephalopod
was one of the teeming sources of food in the Archelon environ-
ment.
''The huge bulk of the mature Archelon might account for the
shearing off and loss of the flippers of younger forms caught between
the shells of the 'elder boatmen of the Cretaceous seas,' as Cope
has called them, during any sudden rush while herding on the shores.
But probably the young turtles did not much frequent the shores
at either egg-laying or other times. Whence it is much more likely
that it was a mosasaur or some of the gigantic fishes like Portheiis
which bit off the right hind flipper in the type specimen of Archelon
ischyros, well above the heel, as I have described it. That this
happened rather early in life is shown by the arrested growth of
the right femur and remaining portions of the tibia and fibula,
which are all uniformly lo per cent smaller than the corresponding
bones of the left flipper."
While there were many small fishes in the Niobrara seas which
the Protostegas inhabited, the most striking thing in the fauna is
the great abundance of moUuscal shells, especially Osirea congesta.
And with them were great hordes of larger pelycypod mollusks,
some of them of enormous size. Some of the largest reach a
diameter of nearly four feet, with shells so thin that one can hardly
understand how they could have supported such large, oyster-like
creatures. One can imagine that such shell-fish might have afforded
an almost inexhaustible source of food for the large turtles; and
several times the writer has found remains of Protostega associated
with such shells. From all of which evidence it seems very prob-
able indeed that Dr. Wieland is right in imputing to these gigantic
turtles a shell-feeding habit, a habit which required neither speed
CHELONIA 241
nor great prowess; and perhaps the formidable beak was used more
in social quarrels than for food-geltin<^. That these marine turtles
departed from the usual reptilian habit of laying their eggs upon
land is improbable. The tortoise shell turtles of the Bahamas lay
three or four hundred eggs in a hollow scooped out in the sand and
then leave the young to their own devices; certainly many a
one is gobbled up by birds of prey or other enemies on their way
to the water. Perhaps the young Archelon lost its hind leg in
some such mishap.
LEATHER-BACK MARINE TURTLES
The most remarkable member of the Chelonia now living is
Dermochelys coriacea (Fig. 128), the great leathery or leather-back
turtle of the warmer parts of the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific
oceans, the sole member of the family Dermochelydidae. It is
the largest of all living turtles and the most thoroughly aquatic
of all, whether living or extinct. It sometimes reaches a length
of six feet, or half that of the largest known extinct forms, and
weighs a thousand or more pounds. Agassiz saw a specimen that
he said weighed a ton. Unlike other turtles, it has a carapace quite
peculiar to itself, composed of a layer of thin, irregularly polyg-
onal bones forming a mosaic, completely hidden in the thick skin,
and entirely free from the skeletal bones beneath them. The
larger of these skin bones form seven rows above, which appear
in the living animal as sharp keels running the whole length of
the shell. On the under side there are five rows of smaller-sized
bones, under which there are vestiges of bones representing the
normal plastron of turtles. The limbs are powerful, flattened
paddles, not unlike those of Eretmochelys, but wholly destitute of
claws. The front paddles are much larger than the hind ones;
the humerus is long and flattened, and the digits are elongated.
The leather-back is a powerful and effective swimmer, going long
distances. Its habits are not well known; its food is chiefly fish,
crustaceans, and moUusks.
So very different is the structure of its shell that some excellent
naturaUsts regard Dermochelys as the equivalent in rank of all other
turtles combined, the sole representative of the suborder Athecae,
242
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
as distinguished from the Thecophora. Dr. Hay, whose authority
on fossil turtles is of the highest, believes that its line of ancestry has
been distinct from that of all other turtles from Triassic times at
least. Others believe that the leather-back is merely a highly
specialized form derived from the ordinary shelled tN^^e, a de-
scendant of some of the marine turtles of Cretaceous times. In
Fig. 128. — Dermochelys coriacea. (From Brehm)
support of the primitive ancestry of the leather-back Dr. Hay
offers the following:
"The writer holds the view that the earliest turtles possessed
practically two kinds of shell, one purely dermal, consisting prob-
ably of a mosaic of small bones arranged in at least twelve longi-
tudinal zones. Each zone probably consisted of a row of larger
bones bordered on each side by smaller bones. Each of these bones
was covered by a horny scute. The nearest approach to such a
dermal shell is in our days seen in Dermochelys. Beneath the skin
there seems to have existed a carapace more or less complete, which
consisted of a nuchal, a median row of neurals, eight pairs of costals,
CHELONIA
243
a pygal, probably one or more suprancurals, and about eleven
peripherals on each side. To what extent the neurals and the
costal plates had become anchylosed to the neural spines and the
ribs respectively, it is now impossible to determine. Nor can we
say to what extent the various elements of the carapace had become
connected with one another. There was a subdcrmal plastron
which was composed of at least eleven bones.
"According to the author's view, as time went on the external,
mosaic-like shell disappeared in most turtles, while a more eflicient
armor was developed out of the subdcrmal elements. In the ances-
tors of Dcrniochelys, however, the dermal armor was retained, while
the more deeply seated one disappeared, with the exception of the
nuchal bone."
Such a hypothesis as the foregoing satisfactorily explains the
extraordinary mosaic shell of the leather-back, and is perhaps an
acceptable explanation of the rather strange fact that the horny
shields of turtles do not correspond with the bones below them,
as might be expected. Unfortunately this hypothesis lacks
sufRcient proof. About the only evidence that is offered in its
support is the existence of a row of bones along the middle line in
the Cretaceous Toxockelys, and notably in Archelon, both aquatic
forms. It is urged that these bones, the epineurals of Wieland,
are really the remains of an external layer that persisted in these
turtles. However, they might have been new ossifications, such
as we know did occur in not a few of the land tortoises later over the
tail and limbs. Aside from Proganochelys in the vast interval of
time from the Triassic to the Eocene no other evidence of such
an external dermal layer has been discovered. The chief argument
against such divergent ancestry of the turtles in two chief lines of
descent is the fact that in its other structure Dermochelys shows
great resemblance to other sea-turtles of the Cretaceous times —
so much resemblance that it seems impossible that the ancestors of
the leather-back should have paralleled them in almost ever>'thing
except the shell.
On the other hand, those who disagree with this view believe
that the modern leather-back is the descendant of such Cretaceous
marine turtles as Protostega or Archelon, some of which had lost
244 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
nearly all of the costal plates and had the neurals and marginals
reduced. It is urged that some of these early marine forms, after
they had practically lost the ordinary bones of the carapace, for
some reason or other found a bony shell again necessary for their
welfare. Possibly they had become littoral in habit; possibly they
again became subject to new and dangerous enemies in their
unprotected condition, notwithstanding their great size; perhaps
the zeuglodons were among their enemies. Now. as we have seen,
an animal never takes a back track and recovers a thing it has
once lost. It was impossible for the ancestors of the leather-back
again to acquire an orthodox shell, and they forthwith proceeded to
acquire quite another kind that would serve the same purpose.
Possibly the truth lies between the variant views, in the theory
recently expressed by Versluys: *'The shell of tortoises and turtles
is formed by a combination of two layers of dermal ossifications, a
thecal layer and a more superficial epithecal layer, the latter
generally represented by the marginals only. The leather-back
is a member of the Cryptodira, and is allied to the other marine
turtles. The problem of the origin of the aberrant shell of the
leather-back seems to find its solution in the h^-pothesis that it is
a secondary proliferation of the marginals and such other epithecal
elements as were present in its thecophorous ancestors."
In other words, Versluys believes that Hay's and Wieland's
views of the primitive double layer of exoskeletal bones is essentially
correct, but that Dermochelys was derived from later forms in which
some of them, only, as in Archelon, had remained. Baur's conten-
tion that ''Dermochelys is not the least, but the most specialized
marine turtle" seems to have been fully justified.
RIVER TURTLES. TRIONYCHOIDEA
No reptile is more familiar or more exasperating to the river
fisherman than the turtle, variously known as the river, soft-
shelled, or mud turtle. It lives, often in great numbers, in most
of the rivers, ponds, and bayous of the interior east of the Rocky
Mountains, and especially in those of sluggish current and muddy
bottoms. It is voraciously carnivorous in habit, feeding upon the
smaller fish, mussels, and such other living food as it can capture.
With its long, sinuous neck and snake-like head, and soft, mottled
CIIELONIA
245
skin, it is repulsive enough to most persons, but is especially annoying
to the fisherman, since it devours with imj^unity his bait so long
as he feeds it, and can seldom be caught on the hook because
of its hard and bony mouth, in which only by good luck will the
hook catch. And the luckless string of fish that the fisherman
leaves in the water may be almost completely devoured in a few
hours by these fiercely predaceous feeders. However, if so annoy-
FiG. i2g. — Triu)i\'x, ri\er turtle. (By permission of the Xew York Zoological
Societ}-.)
ing while seeking for better game, it in part makes up for the
annoyance it causes by furnishing in its own body a not unpalatable
food for those who like to eat reptiles.
The river turtles will be readily recognized from the accompan)'-
ing illustration (Fig. 129). They are very flat, covered with a
soft, smooth skin, with a long, sinuous neck and a small, snake-like
and vicious-looking head which has a protuberant snout with the
external nasal orifice at its end. Their feet are webbed and some-
what paddle-Hke, but always with three stout claws — whence
246
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
comes the name of the group — on the anterior digits, which are
used for burrowing in the mud and excavating holes for their
eggs. These turtles burrow more or less in the mud, with the long
neck free, lying in wait for their prey, and coming to the surface
from time to time to breathe. As the shape of the body and the
paddle-like feet would suggest, they are active swimmers and purely
aquatic in habit, never leaving the water unless compelled to.
They bur\- their hard-shelled eggs on the shores only a few feet
from the water, and leave them to their
fate. If the pools in which they live dry
up, they burrow deeply in the mud and
await the rains and floods. In captivity
they feed upon all kinds of food, vegetable
as well as animal, and are active and
aggressive.
Because of certain peculiarities, they
are usually classed in a separate suborder
all their own, the Trionychoidea, especially
distinguished from the Cryptodira, which
in general they resemble in most respects,
aside from the absence of the usual horny
dermal plates, in the lack of a marginal
row of bony plates around the carapace
— not a very important distinction. Less
than thirty living species are known, all
of them exclusively or chiefly of fresh-
water habit. Six species are known from
North America; the remainder inhabit
Africa, south of the Sahara Desert, southern India, and most of
the East Indian islands; none is known from AustraUa. No
species lives in South America and none is known to have lived
there in past times. During Eocene, Oligocene, and Miocene times
these fresh-water turtles lived in the region of Europe in great
numbers, but for some inexplicable reason they became extinct
there and never returned. Nearly seventy species of the Triony-
choidea, belonging in two families, are described by Dr. Hay from
the Tertiary rocks of North America, more than twice the number
Fig. 130. — Aspidcretcs, a
trionychoid turtle from
the Basal Eocene of New
Mexico; skull from above.
(From Hay.)
CIIELOMA
247
now living throughout the world. Some of these were of rehitivcly
large size, measuring fully two feet in the length of the shell,
And in some places they must have been very
abundant. The writer has seen, in the Bad
Lands of the Continental Divide, their
weathered-out remains so numerous that they
might be raked into windrows miles in length
along the sloping bluffs . all in small frag-
ments, for their bones, like those of most
turtles, are only loosely united by sutures
and readily drop apart before fossilization.
Their shells may be readily distinguished
from those of all other turtles by the granu-
lated, pitted, or sculptured exterior surface,
that was covered by the skin in life; other
turtles have the surface smooth below the
horny shields, the margins of which are
marked on the bones by grooves or sulci;
the few marine turtles of the past that were
probably covered with a soft skin instead of
horny shields had the shell smooth and much
less completely ossified.
As to the origin of the soft-shelled turtles
there has been not a little dift'erence of
opinion. The earliest ones known in geo-
logical history date back only to about the
middle of the Cretaceous; perhaps they
branched off from the horny-shelled turtles
somewhat earlier, but probably not much.
There are some, however, who think that
this group of turtles was very primitive, per-
haps the most primitive, but the writer agrees
with Dr. Hay in rejecting this view. Unlike
those of all other turtles, the fourth digit in
front and hind feet has one or two more phalanges than have other
turtles. We have seen that the oldest known reptiles had the
digital formula 2, 3, 4, 5, 3 or 4. Most other turtles have the same
Fig. 131. — Aspiderc-
tcs, a trionj'choid turtle
from the Eocene of
New Mexico; front leg.
(From Hay.)
248 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AXD PRESENT
numbers of bones in the digits that mammals have, that is, two
phalanges in the thumb and big toe and three in each of the other
digits. The river turtles have a larger number in the fourth digit,
either four or five. It seems to be a law that evolution is irre-
versible, and if so could the river turtles have been descended from
forms with a less number of phalanges ? But, the skeleton of the
Trionychoidea resembles the more specialized turtles in so many
ways that one can hardly believe they were all accidental or parallel.
We may then assume that at about the time that the ordinary
marsh turtles took to the sea to become marine, others took ad-
vantage of the fresh-water ponds and rivers, and in doing so, Hke
the marine turtles, lost their horny epidermal shields, and became
thinner in shape, thereby reducing the resistance to the water.
Instead, however, of reducing the costal plates over the ribs, they
retained them intact and complete for some reason or other, but
lost instead the marginal row of bones, unlike the marine turtles
which retained them even after they had lost nearly all of the costal
plates. Possibly also they regained additional bones in the fourth
digit, a sort of hyperphalangy like that of the more strictly aquatic
reptiles. Or, possibly, they may have descended from some branch
of the turtles which had not yet lost these bones, retaining them
because they were still serviceable for swimming. We know
nothing yet about the structure of the feet of the early turtles, and
it is possible that not all had acquired the reduced phalangeal
formula.
In the development of aquatic habits the river turtles do not
show the same degree of speciaHzation in the limbs that the strictly
marine forms do. The humerus (Fig. 131) is a slender bone, with
the tuberosities for the attachment of the muscles situated near
the proximal end. The radius and ulna are relatively short, and
the foot is long. The hind legs, as would be supposed, are less
highly specialized as swimming paddles, and are relatively smaller.
Nevertheless the Trionychoidea present an interesting type of
adaptation to water habits, both in body and in limbs.
IXDEX
Adaptation to aquatic life, 59.
Aetosauria, 187.
Aifiialosaurs, 146.
Alligator, 142, 1^7.
Ambl\Thynchu$, 142.
.\ndrews, C. \V., 75.
.\ngistorhinus, 190.
Anomodontia, 102.
Aquatic reptiles, adaptation of. 59.
Araeoscclis, 133, 138.
Archelon, 234, 236, 238, 239.
Archosauria, 2,i-
Aspiderectes, 246, 24J.
Baptanodon, 113. 114, 117.
Baur. George, 119, 120. 185. 234.
Belodon, 185, i8g, igi.
Belodontia, 185.
Beche. De la, 73.
Bogalobou, 75.
Broom. Robert. 5. 102, 103, 129.
Brown, Bamum. 93, 179.
Buckland. Dean. 75, 77.
Cacops. 35.
Camper. .Adrian. 149. 166.
Camper. Peter, 149, 166.
Captorhinus. 4g.
Caretta. 230.
Carpus. 38.
Casea. 33.
Case, E. C, 234.
Champsosaurus, jg, iSo. iSi, 182.
Chelone. 220, 229.
Chevrons. 32.
Choristodera, 178.
Classification of reptiles. 13.
Clavicles. 37.
Cleithrum. 36.
Clidastes. 147. 134. 133, 137, 166.
Collection of fossils. 10.
Colpochelys. 222.
Conybeare, Rev., 73, no, 149.
Cope. E. D., 126, 176, 178, 185, 231, 23s.
Coracoid. 36.
Cotylosauria. 16.
Crj-ptodira. 226.
Cretaceous of Kansas. 8.
Crocodiles, ancient, 204; marine. 207;
modem. 195.
Crocodilia, 15, 194.
Crocodilus. 795.
Cu\-ier, Georges, 73, 97, 107, no, 149.
Darwin. Charles, 142.
Dc Fond, St. Faujas, 148.
Dermochelys, 241, 242.
De*matochelys. 231, 232.
Dimetrodon, 36, 31.
Dinosauria, 18.
Dolichosaurs, 145.
Dolichobrachium. 54.
Dollo, Louis, 167, 179.
Edaphosaurus, 22.
Elasmosaurus, 78, 84, 86, gi.
Enaliosauria, 75.
Eosauravus, 52.
Episcoposaurus. 190.
Eretmochelys, 230.
Er\ops. 31, 47.
Eusuchia, 195.
E.xoskeleton. 43.
E.xtinct reptiles of North .\merica, 5 2.
Femur. 41.
Fibula, 41.
Foot. 42.
Fraas. Eberhard, 74, 75,99, in. 115, 185.
213-
Gastroliths, g2. 200.
Ga\ial. Borneo. 201: Gangetic. ig8, tgg
202.
Ga\'ialidae, 203.
Geological .\ges. 46.
Geosaurus, 208, 210, 211, 212. 214.
Ger\'ais, Professor. 126.
Gilmore. Charles, 113, 167.
Globidens. 167.
Goldfuss. -August, 151.
Graptemys, 218.
Hadrosaurus. 56.
Hand. 38.
Hauff. B.. 122.
Hay, Oliver P., 220. 227, 228, 234, 242.
Hofmann, Dr.. 148.
Holops. 207.
Home. Everard. no.
Homo diluvii testis, 108.
Huene. Friedrich von. 131, 185.
Humerus. 38.
Huxley. Thomas. 185. 207.
Hydnis. i6g.
HNperphalang)', 118.
H\-pocentrum, 36.
249
2;0
WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT
Ichlli\os;iuria, 17, 107.
Ichthyosaurus, 108, 112, 119, 121, 122.
T^uana, 140.
Ilium, 3Q.
Inlcrclaviclc, 37.
Intcrcentrum, 30.
Ischium, 39.
Jaeger, George, 184.
Jaekel, 185.
Karoo beds, 102.
Koenig, no.
26, so.
Labidosaurus, 2.
Laecertiha, 140.
Lariosaurus, gg, 100.
Leather-back turtles, 241.
Lcidy, Joseph, 151.
Limnoscelis, 20, 47.
Lizards, 140; flatheaded, 144; Galapagos,
142.
Lull, Richard, 54.
Lystrosaurus, 103, 104.
Lortet, M., 135.
McGregor, J. H., 126, 129, 131, 185, 186,
189.
Mandible, 25.
Mantell, Dr., 75.
Marsh, O. C., 54, 185.
Merriam, J. C., 112, 120, 171, 174.
Merriamia, 118.
Mesosaurus, 126, 727, 128.
Mesosuchia, 185, 204.
Meyer, Herman von, 75, 87, 132, 134, 184.
Mixosaurus, 1 19.
Monitor lizards, 144.
Mosasauria, 148, 166.
Mosasaurus, 148; hofmanni, 149; maxi-
miliani, 151.
Miinster, Georg von, 97.
Mudge, B. F., 93.
Mystriosuchus, 185, 18S, i8g, igi.
Nares, 23.
Nectosaurus, 175.
Nolhosauria, 95.
Nothosaurus, g6, gj, g8.
O'Fallen, Major, 151.
Ophiacodon, 30, 32, 37, 38, 40, 42.
Ophidia, 168.
Ophthalmosaurus, 118, I2j.
Orders of reptiles, 16.
Osborn, H. F., 126.
Ostodolepis, 33.
Owen, Richard, 75, 103, no, in, 185.
Parasuchia, 18, 184.
Parietal foramen, 23.
Pectoral girdle, 34.
Pelvic girdle, 39.
Pelvis, 39.
Petycosauria, 186.
Pelycosimia, 187.
Phytosauria, 18, 187.
Phytosaurus, 186, 187.
Pineal foramen, 23.
Platecarpus, 75/, ijj, 136, ij8, ijg, 166.
Platynola, 148.
Plesiosauria, 77.
Plesiosaurus, 74.
Pleurodira, 224.
Pleurosaurus. 134, 136, 177.
Polycotylus, 80.
Proatlas, 32.
Proganochelys, 217.
Proganosauria, 17.
Proteosaurus, 1 10.
Protorosauria, 17, 132.
Protorosaurus, 132.
Protostega, 233, 234.
Protostegidae, 231.
Pseudosuchia, 185.
Pterosauria, 18.
Pubis, 39.
Pythonomorpha (Mosasauria), 166.
Range of Reptilia, 45.
Rhachitomous vertebrae, 17.
Rhynchocephaha, 17, 176.
Rhytidodon, 190.
Ribs, 33.
River turtles, 244.
Rutiodon, igo.
Sacrum, 32.
Sapheosaurus. lyS.
Sauranodon (Hai^tanodon), 125.
Sauropterygia. 17, 73.
Scheuchzer, 107
Seeley, H. G., 75, 126, 132.
Seymouria, 2/. 48.
Shoulder girdle, 34.
Simoedosaurus, 179.
Skeleton of rcjitiles, 19.
Skull of reptiles, 21.
Snakes, 168.
Spener, 132.
Sphenodon, 24, 132, 176.
Squamata, 17, 138.
Stegocejjhalia, 48.
Stereosternum, 126.
Sternum, 37.
Stomach stones, 200.
Palcorhinus, 190.
Paliguana, 5.
Tarsus, 42.
Teeth, 21, 25.
INDEX
2^1
Tcleosaurus, 205.
Temporal openings, 23.
Testudo, 228.
Thalattosauria, 17, 171.
Thalatlosaurus, 172, 173, 174.
Thalaltosuchia, 207.
Therapsida, 16.
Theromorpha, 16.
ThaiinialDsaurus, 74.
Thoracosaurus, 207.
Tibia, 41.
Tomistomidae, 201.
Tortoises, 216; fresh-water, 226; land,
227; marsh, 226.
Toxochelys, 2ig, 231, 232.
Trachemys, 221.
Trimerorhachis, 25.
Trinacromerum, 77, Si, S3, Sj, SS, Sg.
Trionychoidca, 244.
'I'rionyx, 245.
Tiiatcra, 176. Sec Sjihcnodon.
Tunics, 216; river, 244; sea, 229; ancient
sea, 231; side-necked, 224.
Tylosaurus, /.ij, i^fi, i