Wirtembergia hauboldae Sues & Schoch, 2024

Sues, Hans-Dieter & Schoch, Rainer R., 2025, Synopsis of the Triassic reptiles from Germany, Fossil Record 28 (2), pp. 411-483 : 411-483

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3897/fr.28.164405

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E2366C87-D1C3-4F5A-A21D-1A7A5D49BB8F

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17824008

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F5A04138-6ECC-5863-9868-9B019DC3A877

treatment provided by

by Pensoft

scientific name

Wirtembergia hauboldae Sues & Schoch, 2024
status

 

Wirtembergia hauboldae Sues & Schoch, 2024

Holotype.

SMNS 91313 About SMNS , disarticulated but associated skeletal remains including complete right maxilla (Fig. 10 B View Figure 10 ), incomplete right pterygoid, possible fragment of palatine, nearly complete left dentary, vertebrae, ribs, and limb bones.

Type locality.

Schumann Quarry, near Eschenau, Vellberg municipality, Schwäbisch Hall district, Baden-Würtemberg.

Type horizon.

Untere Graue Mergel, Bed E 6, Erfurt Formation, Lower Keuper Subgroup. Age: Middle Triassic (Ladinian: Longobardian).

Referred material.

See list in Sues and Schoch (2024).

Diagnosis.

Distinguished by the following combination of features: premaxilla with four teeth, decreasing in size from first to fourth; jugal with tiny, spur-like posterior process; lateral surface of dentary strongly convex dorsoventrally for much of bone, forming distinct longitudinal ridge in larger specimens; coronoid eminence of dentary low, roughly rectangular, and with dorsoventrally concave lateral surface in larger specimens; dentition comprising pleurodont anterior and acrodont posterior teeth; and posterior (= additional) teeth with (in labial / lingual view) triangular, at mid-crown level labiolingually slightly flattened crowns, and with oval bases ( Sues and Schoch 2024).

Comments.

Wirtembergia hauboldae is more plesiomorphic in some cranial features than Gephyrosaurus bridensis , which was long considered the earliest-diverging rhynchocephalian. However, it is more derived than the latter in the presence of anterior pleurodont and posterior acrodont teeth in each jaw.

References.

Jones et al. (2013), Sues and Schoch (2024).