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  2. Archosaur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archosaur

    Archosaurs are ancestrally superprecocial as evidenced in various dinosaurs, pterosaurs, and crocodylomorphs. [43] However, parental care did evolve independently multiple times in crocodilians, dinosaurs, and aetosaurs. [44] In most such species the animals bury their eggs and rely on temperature-dependent sex determination.

  3. Archosaurus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archosaurus

    The "classic" definition of archosaur utilized prior to the widespread use of cladistics is now roughly equivalent to the clade Archosauriformes. [5] Archosaurus is still considered the oldest undisputed archosauriform, as well as one of the few valid members of the family Proterosuchidae .

  4. Evolution of birds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_birds

    An alternate theory to the dinosaurian origin of birds, espoused by a few scientists, notably Larry Martin and Alan Feduccia, states that birds (including maniraptoran "dinosaurs") evolved from early archosaurs like Longisquama. [9] This theory is contested by most other paleontologists and experts in feather development and evolution. [10]

  5. Evolution of reptiles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_reptiles

    The archosaurs became the dominant group during the Triassic period, developing into the well-known dinosaurs and pterosaurs, as well as the pseudosuchians. The Mesozoic is often called the "Age of Reptiles", a phrase coined by the early 19th-century paleontologist Gideon Mantell who recognized the dinosaurs and the ancestors of the ...

  6. Geologists Found Ancient Bird Footprints That Are 60 Million ...

    www.aol.com/archaeologists-found-ancient-bird...

    The age of the dinosaurs never really ended—it only evolved. Birds (and their more reptilian cousins, the Crocodilia ) are the modern-day legacy of dinosaur’s 165-million-year-long stint on Earth.

  7. Pseudosuchia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudosuchia

    The name Pseudosuchia was originally given to a group of superficially crocodile-like prehistoric reptiles from the Triassic period, but fell out of use in the late 20th century, especially after the name Crurotarsi was established in 1990 to label the clade (evolutionary grouping) of archosaurs encompassing most reptiles previously identified as pseudosuchians.

  8. Thecodontia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thecodontia

    Traditionally, the order Thecodontia Owen, 1859 was divided into four suborders, the Proterosuchia (early primitive forms, another paraphyletic assemblage), Phytosauria (large crocodile-like semi-aquatic animals), the Aetosauria (armoured herbivores), and the Pseudosuchia, a wastebasket taxon intended to be paraphyletic to all later archosaurs (see e.g., Alfred Sherwood Romer's Vertebrate ...

  9. Avemetatarsalia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avemetatarsalia

    Birds evolved flight much later. Their wings formed from elongated fingers and their arms, all covered with flight feathers. Avemetatarsalians were generally more lightly built than crocodile-line archosaurs. They had smaller heads and usually a complete lack of osteoderms.