Jaws and dentition closely resembling those of the extant tuatara (Sphenodon) are described from the Manuherikia Group (Early Miocene; 19–16 million years ago, Mya) of Central Otago, New Zealand. This material is significant in bridging a gap of nearly 70 million years in the rhynchocephalian fossil record between the Late Pleistocene of New Zealand and the Late Cretaceous of Argentina. It provides the first pre-Pleistocene record of Rhynchocephalia in New Zealand, a finding consistent with the view that the ancestors of Sphenodon have been on the landmass since it separated from the rest of Gondwana 82–60 Mya. However, if New Zealand was completely submerged near the Oligo-Miocene boundary (25–22 Mya), as recently suggested, an ancestral s...
Rhynchocephalian lepidosaurs, though once widespread worldwide, are represented today only by the tu...
The increasingly dense fossil record of archaeocetes (stem cetaceans) is well represented in Eocene ...
Assemblages of fossil leaves ranging in age from Upper Oligocene to Upper Miocene or Lower Pliocene ...
The tuatara, Sphenodon punctatus, known from 32 small islands around New Zealand, has often been not...
New Zealand (NZ) has long been upheld as the archetypical example of a land where the biota evolved ...
Known Early-Middle Miocene terrestrial strata of southern New Zealand are represented by alluvial pl...
The New Zealand tuatara (Sphenodon) is the sole surviving rhynchocephalian of a once thriving group ...
55The Tuatara is a reptile that today inhabits only New Zealand. It is the sole surviving member of ...
The ratite moa (Aves: Dinornithiformes) were a speciose group of massive graviportal avian herbivore...
This paper highlights the geology, biodiversity and palaeoecology of the Hindon Maar Complex, the se...
It is not a peneplain. Formation of the Waipounamu Erosion Surface began in Late Cretaceous time fol...
The tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus) is the only living representative of Rhynchocephalia, a group of s...
The New Zealand endemic bat family Mystacinidae comprises just two Recent species referred to a sing...
The origins and evolutionary history of the New Zealand flora has been the subject of much debate. T...
It has recently been suggested that a ‘living fossil’ can be identified because it is both morpholog...
Rhynchocephalian lepidosaurs, though once widespread worldwide, are represented today only by the tu...
The increasingly dense fossil record of archaeocetes (stem cetaceans) is well represented in Eocene ...
Assemblages of fossil leaves ranging in age from Upper Oligocene to Upper Miocene or Lower Pliocene ...
The tuatara, Sphenodon punctatus, known from 32 small islands around New Zealand, has often been not...
New Zealand (NZ) has long been upheld as the archetypical example of a land where the biota evolved ...
Known Early-Middle Miocene terrestrial strata of southern New Zealand are represented by alluvial pl...
The New Zealand tuatara (Sphenodon) is the sole surviving rhynchocephalian of a once thriving group ...
55The Tuatara is a reptile that today inhabits only New Zealand. It is the sole surviving member of ...
The ratite moa (Aves: Dinornithiformes) were a speciose group of massive graviportal avian herbivore...
This paper highlights the geology, biodiversity and palaeoecology of the Hindon Maar Complex, the se...
It is not a peneplain. Formation of the Waipounamu Erosion Surface began in Late Cretaceous time fol...
The tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus) is the only living representative of Rhynchocephalia, a group of s...
The New Zealand endemic bat family Mystacinidae comprises just two Recent species referred to a sing...
The origins and evolutionary history of the New Zealand flora has been the subject of much debate. T...
It has recently been suggested that a ‘living fossil’ can be identified because it is both morpholog...
Rhynchocephalian lepidosaurs, though once widespread worldwide, are represented today only by the tu...
The increasingly dense fossil record of archaeocetes (stem cetaceans) is well represented in Eocene ...
Assemblages of fossil leaves ranging in age from Upper Oligocene to Upper Miocene or Lower Pliocene ...