AnimaliaNot EvaluatedacceptedspeciesAccepted
Albanerpeton inexpectatum

Albanerpeton inexpectatum

Estes & Hoffstetter, 1976

GBIF:203870957

0year

ABOUT

Descriptions(3)

Description. Frontal: Frontal is partly preserved. It is triangular in shape and as wide as long (Fig. 2 A). The entire preserved dorsal surface of the bone is covered by moderately deep polygonal pits limited from each other by rather low ridges. The anterolateral processes are missing. The anteriorly-projecting internasal is rather narrow and elongated. In ventral view, its spike-like outline is more evident (Fig. 2 B). Only the anteromedial slot is preserved. It is long, low and not deep. In ventral view, the ventrolateral crest is broad, concave and in transverse view, triangular in outline. It starts at the base of the preserved portion of the anterolateral process and projects posterolaterally, reaching the posterior lateral tips of the frontal. The crest becomes thinner laterally. The ventral surface of the frontal, between the posterolateral crests, is flat. Praemaxilla: Available four praemaxillae show different preservation and are not fused. The medial surface of the bone, where two praemaxillae connect with each other, possesses grooves and flanges (Fig. 2 G). The width of the bone, measured along the tooth row, ranges from 1 - 1.5 mm. The pars dorsalis is elongated and long. In lateral view, it is curved. The laterodorsal notch is weakly developed. The pars dorsalis at its middle part extends slightly laterally, which in large-sized bones is stronger developed than in the small-sized ones. The labial surface of the bone is covered by different structures (Fig. 2 C, F). The ventral portion, corresponding to the pars dentalis, is nearly smooth. The middle part of the surface, making the most of the pars dorsalis, is pierced by nutrition foramina. The tip of the pars dorsalis possesses the boss. Pustular structures and polygonal-shaped pits cover it. In labial view, the maxillary process of praemaxilla projects laterally behind the pars dorsalis. In lingual view, the well-developed suprapalatal pit at the medial base of the pars dorsalis is present (Fig. 2 D, H). It has an elongate outline and reopens ventrally as a palatal foramen in the ventral surface of the pars palatinum. In medial view, the pars palatinum is curved. Distinct vomerine and maxillary processes are visible on the pars palatinum. The maxillary process is stronger developed than the vomerine one. Six to seven pleurodont teeth are attached to the pars dentalis. Maxilla: In total, eight maxillae with different preservation are available. The pars dentalis in most well-preserved specimens possesses 13 - 14 teeth or tooth bases. In lingual view, the pars dentalis is high anteriorly and reduces in height posteriorly (Fig. 2 J, M, P). The pars palatinum is well-developed and curved. In the middle part of the bone, it reaches its most width. The anterior tip of the pars palatinum extends anteromedially and forms a distinct process (Fig. 2 J, P). The premaxillary process is well developed (Fig. 2 M, P). The distinct nasal process projects anterodorsally (Fig. 2 J, M). Both the dorsal and labial surfaces of the maxillae are pierced by short rows of up to three nutrition foramina, which are limited to the area around the nasal process (Fig. 2 N, L, Q). Dentary: All eleven dentaries are only partially preserved. No dentary with a fully preserved tooth row (pars dentalis) is available in the material to count the tooth number. The teeth reduce in height posteriorly. The Meckelian groove is closed and form a canal. The dental shelf is moderately broad, and its lingual margin is angular (Fig. 2 R, V). The symphyseal articulation surfaces are flat and vertical. Lingually, it possesses two distinct prongs (Fig. 2 R, S). The dorsal prong is long and oriented anterodorsally. The ventral one is smaller and anteroventrally oriented. The ventral prong and the main symphyseal surface are separated with a moderately deep depression, which is pierced by the anterior opening of the Meckelian groove. The latter opens posteriorly with two large ventral and small dorsal (" opening for an unnamed canal " sensu Szentesi et al. (2015); fig. 8) openings. Taking into account the " natural " cross-sections of the bones (Fig. 2 U, X, Z), the split of the Meckelian canal into two branches already at the sixth tooth position can be stated. The small dorsal branch runs below the tooth row, whereas the large ventral one is enclosed in the ventral portion of the bone. The labial surface of the dentary is smooth. A row of labial foramina of different sizes is arranged along the midline of the dentary (Fig. 2 T, W, Y). Dentition: The teeth on premaxillae, maxillae. and dentary have similar morphology. All teeth are pleurodont and closely located. The tip of teeth is tricuspid with a main central large cuspid and two lateral small cuspids, which are sometimes nearly absent. The tooth pedicles are compressed anterodorsally. The tooth tip is round in cross-section. They reduce in size posteriorly.
Vasilyan, Davit, Cernansky, Andrej, Szyndlar, Zbigniew, Moers, Thomas (2022): Amphibian and reptilian fauna from the early Miocene of Echzell, Germany. Fossil Record 25 (1): 99-145, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/fr.25.83781, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/fr.25.83781
Fig. 2
Vasilyan, Davit, Cernansky, Andrej, Szyndlar, Zbigniew, Moers, Thomas (2022): Amphibian and reptilian fauna from the early Miocene of Echzell, Germany. Fossil Record 25 (1): 99-145, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/fr.25.83781, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/fr.25.83781
Material and horizon. One frontal HLMD-Ez 2004, four praemaxillae HLMD-Ez 2005 - 2008, nine maxillae HLMD-Ez 2009 - 2016, ten dentaries HLMD-Ez 2017 - 2027, one vertebra HLMD-Ez 2028.
Vasilyan, Davit, Cernansky, Andrej, Szyndlar, Zbigniew, Moers, Thomas (2022): Amphibian and reptilian fauna from the early Miocene of Echzell, Germany. Fossil Record 25 (1): 99-145, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/fr.25.83781, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/fr.25.83781

Export occurrence data

Darwin Core Archive (ZIP)

CLASSIFICATION

Taxonomic Classification Tree

MULTIMEDIA

Media Files(1)

Figure 2. Albanerpeton inexpectatum from the Echzell locality. Frontal (A, B. HLMD-Ez 2004). Premaxillae (C-E. HLMD-Ez 2161; F-I. HLMD-Ez 2005). Maxillae (J-L. HLMD-Ez 2009; M-O. HLMD-Ez 2010; P, Q. HLMD-Ez 2012). The bones are figured in (A, K) dorsal, (B) ventral, (C, F, L, N, Q, T, W, Y) labial, (D, E, H, J, M, O, P, R, V, AA) lingual, (I) ventroposterior, (S, X) medial, (G, U, Z) posterior views. Where not indicated, the scale bar equals 5 mm.

Imageimage/png© Vasilyan, Davit;Cernansky, Andrej;Szyndlar, Zbigniew;Moers, ThomasVasilyan, Davit;Cernansky, Andrej;Szyndlar, Zbigniew;Moers, Thomas

IMAGES

Gallery(1)

See Gallery

Occurrences with images

Source Information

Amphibian and reptilian fauna from the early Miocene of Echzell, Germany

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Vasilyan, Davit, Cernansky, Andrej, Szyndlar, Zbigniew, Moers, Thomas (2022): Amphibian and reptilian fauna from the early Miocene of Echzell, Germany. Fossil Record 25 (1): 99-145, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/fr.25.83781, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/fr.25.83781

Vasilyan D, Cernansky A, Szyndlar Z, Moers T, pensoft (2022). Amphibian and reptilian fauna from the early Miocene of Echzell, Germany. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/fvb6q2 accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-16.

CC0Published 5/10/2022View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
203870957
Dataset Key
879a081e-5c23-41a3-b500-84ae793fb677
Origin
source
Backbone Key
4964720
Taxon ID
D95E7373F59A5235B1A8229D1A68E4A5.taxon
Last Crawled
6/9/2026
Last Interpreted
6/9/2026