This Specimen has been sold.
.49" Permian Amphibian (Trimerorhachis) Claw - Oklahoma
This is a sharp claw of the primitive, Permian amphibian Trimerorhachis. It was collected from the Ryan Formation near Waurika, Oklahoma and comes in an acrylic display case.
Trimerorhachis was an early dvinosaurian temnospondyl which could reach about 1 meter in length. It had a distinctive triangularly shaped head full of sharp, pointy teeth and stubby legs. It was likely an aquatic predator, preying on fish and small vertebrates.
During the Early Permian, the area of New Mexico and Texas was a broad coastal plain that stretched from an ocean in the south to highlands in the north. Other common animals that lived alongside Trimerorhachis included lungfish and crossopterygians, the lepospondyl Diplocaulus, and the large sail-backed synapsid Dimetrodon.
Trimerorhachis was an early dvinosaurian temnospondyl which could reach about 1 meter in length. It had a distinctive triangularly shaped head full of sharp, pointy teeth and stubby legs. It was likely an aquatic predator, preying on fish and small vertebrates.
During the Early Permian, the area of New Mexico and Texas was a broad coastal plain that stretched from an ocean in the south to highlands in the north. Other common animals that lived alongside Trimerorhachis included lungfish and crossopterygians, the lepospondyl Diplocaulus, and the large sail-backed synapsid Dimetrodon.
SPECIES
Trimerorhachis
AGE
LOCATION
Waurika, Oklahoma
FORMATION
Ryan Formation
SIZE
.49" long (straightline)
CATEGORY
ITEM
#33606
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