'Rauisuchia' are a poorly known assemblage of predatory and mostly large (often 4 to 6 meters)
Triassic archosaurs. Originally it was believed that they were related to
Erythrosuchids (Sill, 1974), but it is now known that they are
crurotarsans (Benton 2004). Three families are generally recognised:
Prestosuchidae,
Rauisuchidae, and
Poposauridae, as well as a number of forms (e.g. those from the
Olenekian of Russia) that are too primitive and/or poorly known to fit in any of these groups. There has been considerable suggestion that the group as currently defined is
paraphyletic, representing a number of related lineages independently evolving and filling the same ecological niche of medium to top terrestrial predator. For example, Parrish (1993) and Juul (1994) found poposaurid rauisuchians to be more closely related to
Crocodilia than to prestosuchids. In a more recent study, Nesbitt (2003) presented a different phylogeny with a
monophyletic Rauisuchia. The group may even be something of a "
wastebasket taxon". Determining exact phylogenetic relationships is difficult because of the scrappy nature of a lot of the material. However, recent discoveries and studies such as those of ''
Batrachotomus'' (Gower, 2002; Benton & Walker 2002) are shedding light on the evolutionary relationships of this poorly known but fascinating group.
José Bonaparte and following him
Michael Benton argue (Bonaparte 1981, Benton, 1984) that rauisuchians such as ''
Saurosuchus'' developed an erect stance independently of and differently to
dinosaurs, by means of having the
femur vertical and angling the
acetabulum ventrally, rather than having an angled neck or curve in the femur. They refer to this as the pillar-erect posture.
The erect gait indicates that these animals were clearly active, agile predators, with locomotor superiority over the
kannemeyerid dicynodonts and abundant
rhynchosaurs on which they fed. They were successful animals, the largest with skulls a meter or more in length, and continued right until the end of the Triassic, when, along with many other large archosaurs, they were killed off by the
end Triassic extinction event. With their demise,
theropod dinosaurs were able to emerge as the sole large terrestrial predators. Meat-eating dinosaur footprints suddenly increase in size at the start of the
Jurassic, when rauisuchians are absent (Olsen ''et al.'' 2002). However, recently found Cretaceous fossils originally thought to be those of crocodiles, but which resemble rauisuchians, might suggest that a few rauisuchians survived under the shadows of dinosaurs until the
Cretaceous–Tertiary extinction event.)
Well-known Rauisuchians include ''
Ticinosuchus'' of the Middle Triassic of Europe (Switzerland and Northern Italy), ''
Saurosuchus'' of the late Triassic (Late
Carnian) of South America (Argentina), and ''
Postosuchus'' of the late Triassic (Late
Carnian to Early
Norian) of North America (SW USA). One Rauisuchian, ''
Teratosaurus'', was for a long time even considered an early
theropod dinosaur.
External links
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Translation and Pronunciation Guide
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Palaeos
References
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Rauisuchians and the success of dinosaurs, , M. J., Benton, Nature, 1984
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Vertebrate Paleontology, , M. J., Benton, Blackwell Science Ltd, 2004,
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Erpetosuchus, a crocodile-like basal archosaur from the Late Triassic of Elgin, Scotland, , M. J., Benton, Zool. J. Linn. Soc, 2002
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Locomotion in rauisuchid thecodonts, , J. F., Bonaparte, Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 1984
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Vertebrate Paleontology and Evolution, , R. L., Carroll, WH Freeman & Co, 1988,
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Braincase evolution in suchian archosaurs (Reptilia: Diapsida): evidence from the rauisuchian Batrachotomus kupferzellensis, , D. J., Gower, Zool. J. Linn. Soc, 2002
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The phylogeny of basal archosaurs, , L., Juul, Palaeontologia Africana, 1994
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Arizonasaurus'' and its implications for archosaur divergence, , S. J., Nesbitt, Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 2003
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Ascent of Dinosaurs Linked to an Iridium Anomaly at the Triassic-Jurassic Boundary, , P. E., Olsen, Science, 2002
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Phylogeny of the Crocodylotarsi, with reference to archosaurian and crurotarsan monophyly, , J. M., Parrish, Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 1993
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The anatomy of Saurosuchus galilei and the relationships of the rauisuchid thecodonts, , W. D., Sill, Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, 1974