Bristol undergraduate reconstructs the skulls of two species of ancient reptile

Life image of Clevosaurus
                           Sophie Chambi-Trowell
Life image of Clevosaurus Sophie Chambi-Trowell
Using two partially fragmented fossil skulls, a student at the University of Bristol has digitally reconstructed, in three-dimensions, the skulls of two species of ancient reptile that lived in the Late Triassic, one of which had been previously known only from its jaws. The research was completed by Sofia Chambi-Trowell, an undergraduate in Bristol's School of Earth Sciences , as part of her final-year project for her degree in Palaeobiology. Clevosaurus was a lizard-like reptile that was first named back in 1939 from specimens found at Cromhall Quarry, near Bristol. Since then, similar beasts have been found elsewhere around Bristol and in South Wales, as well as in China and North America. Clevosaurus was an early representative of an ancient group of reptiles called Rhynchocephalia, which today is represent only by the tuatara of New Zealand. In her project, Sofia worked on new fossils of Clevosaurus hudsoni , the first species to be named,and Clevosaurus cambrica , which was named from a quarry site in South Wales in 2018. She used CT scans of both skulls to reconstruct their original appearance, and she found evidence that the two species, which lived at the same time in the Late Triassic, some 205 million years ago, showed significant differences.
account creation

TO READ THIS ARTICLE, CREATE YOUR ACCOUNT

And extend your reading, free of charge and with no commitment.



Your Benefits

  • Access to all content
  • Receive newsmails for news and jobs
  • Post ads

myScience