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Pages in category "Carboniferous tetrapods of North America" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Other digit-bearing stem tetrapods were significantly smaller (skulls under 40 centimetres (16 in) in length), and nearly all were restricted to the tropics of Euramerica, a low-latitude region equivalent to present-day Europe and North America. Gaiasia hints that stem-tetrapods in Southern latitudes continued to persist and evolve through the ...
Mesozoic tetrapods of North America (6 C) P. Paleozoic tetrapods of North America (5 C) R. Prehistoric reptiles of North America (7 C, 3 P) S.
In effect, "tetrapod" is a name reserved solely for animals which lie among living tetrapods, so-called crown tetrapods. This is a node-based clade , a group with a common ancestry descended from a single "node" (the node being the nearest common ancestor of living species).
Carboniferous tetrapods of North America (4 C, 8 P) P. Permian tetrapods of North America (5 C, 1 P) R. Paleozoic reptiles of North America (2 C, 1 P) S.
Early Cretaceous tetrapods of North America (2 C) R. Cretaceous reptiles of North America (5 C, 10 P) S. Cretaceous synapsids of North America (3 C)
Category: Eocene tetrapods of North America. ... Eocene reptiles of North America (1 C, 29 P) This page was last edited on 9 November 2023, at 17:53 (UTC). ...
Late Jurassic tetrapods of North America (2 C) R. Jurassic reptiles of North America (7 C, 7 P) S. Jurassic synapsids of North America (3 C)