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Pelobatidae

Pelobatidae

Bonaparte, 1850

GBIF:226325460

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Figure 19 P-U
Villa, Andrea, Macaluso, Loredana, Mörs, Thomas (2024): Miocene and Pliocene amphibians from Hambach (Germany): New evidence for a late Neogene refuge in northwestern Europe. Palaeontologia Electronica (a 3) 27 (1): 1-56, DOI: 10.26879/1323, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.26879/1323
Discussion. IPB-HaH 2220 (Figure 19 P-S) is a moderately large-sized and procoelous trunk vertebra. It has a cylindrical centrum and a long neural arch, with a low carina neuralis and a well-developed posterior point. Transverse processes are broken off, but they were located under the prezygapophyses. The humerus (Figure 19 T-U) is small, but preserves part of the diaphysis and part of the epiphysis. The eminentia capitata is shifted laterally. A shallow fossa cubitalis ventralis, which is open on the lateral side, is present. The epicondyles are missing. The cristae medialis and lateralis are not developed. On the dorsal side, the visible part of the olecranon scar is poorly marked. Remarks. Following Bailon (1999), these two fossils can be assigned to pelobatids. This attribution is based on: vertebra procoelous, with a long neural arch, transverse processes located ventral to the prezygapophyses, a cylindrical centrum, and a well-developed posterior point; humerus with a laterally-open fossa cubitalis ventralis and maybe also lateral shift of the eminentia capitata. The absence of more taxonomically significant elements in the Miocene level of Hambach, however, hinders a discrimination of either Eopelobates or Pelobates.
Villa, Andrea, Macaluso, Loredana, Mörs, Thomas (2024): Miocene and Pliocene amphibians from Hambach (Germany): New evidence for a late Neogene refuge in northwestern Europe. Palaeontologia Electronica (a 3) 27 (1): 1-56, DOI: 10.26879/1323, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.26879/1323
Material. Hambach 6 C: one trunk vertebra (IPB-HaH 2220); one humerus (IPB-HaH 2399).
Villa, Andrea, Macaluso, Loredana, Mörs, Thomas (2024): Miocene and Pliocene amphibians from Hambach (Germany): New evidence for a late Neogene refuge in northwestern Europe. Palaeontologia Electronica (a 3) 27 (1): 1-56, DOI: 10.26879/1323, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.26879/1323

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FIGURE 19. Pelobatids from Hambach: sacral vertebra (IPB-HaR 2179) of cf. Eopelobates sp. in dorsal (A), anterior (B), posterior (C) and ventral (D) views; left humerus (IPB-HaR 2154) of cf. Eopelobates sp. in ventral (E) and dorsal (F) views; left ilium (IPB-HaR 2084) of cf. Eopelobates sp. in lateral (G) and medial (H) views; right ilium (IPB-HaR 2103) of cf. Eopelobates sp. in lateral (I) and medial (J) views; right humerus (IPB-HaR 2414) of?Eopelobates sp. in ventral (K) and dorsal (L) views; left humerus (IPB-HaR 2415) of?Eopelobates sp. in ventral view (M); right ilium (IPB-HaR 2421) of?Eopelobates sp. in lateral (N) and medial (O) views; trunk vertebra (IPB-HaH 2220) of Pelobatidae indet. in right lateral (P), anterior (Q), dorsal (R) and posterior (S) views; left humerus (IPB-HaH 2399) of Pelobatidae indet. in ventral (T) and dorsal (U) views. Scale bars equal 1 mm. Abbreviations: dae, dorsal acetabular expansion; fcv, fossa cubitalis ventralis.

Imageimage/png© Villa, Andrea;Macaluso, Loredana;Mörs, ThomasVilla, Andrea;Macaluso, Loredana;Mörs, Thomas

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Miocene and Pliocene amphibians from Hambach (Germany): New evidence for a late Neogene refuge in northwestern Europe

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This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Villa, Andrea, Macaluso, Loredana, Mörs, Thomas (2024): Miocene and Pliocene amphibians from Hambach (Germany): New evidence for a late Neogene refuge in northwestern Europe. Palaeontologia Electronica (a 3) 27 (1): 1-56, DOI: 10.26879/1323, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.26879/1323

ABSTRACT

The Hambach lignite mine in northwestern Germany is a renowned fossil locality, which has yielded remains of several vertebrates dated back to the Middle Miocene and the Late Pliocene. Among these is a recently-described and peculiar proteid urodele, Euronecturus grogu, currently known only from the Middle Miocene level in Hambach. Here, we provide detailed descriptions and identifications of the remaining fossil amphibians (both urodeles and anurans) from the Hambach mine, in total identifying at least 12 Middle Miocene taxa (Cryptobranchidae indet., Palaeoproteus cf. miocenicus, E. grogu, Chelotriton sp., Lissotriton sp., Triturus sp., Latonia sp.,? Palaeobatrachidae indet., Pelobatidae indet., Hyla sp., Pelophylax sp., Rana sp.) and at least nine Late Pliocene ones (Palaeoproteus cf. miocenicus, Mioproteus cf. wezei, Lissotriton sp., Latonia sp., Palaeobatrachus eurydices, cf. Eopelobates sp., Hyla sp., Bufo gr. bufo, Ranidae indet.). The high diversity of amphibians in both Miocene and Pliocene levels at Hambach supports a very humid climate persisting in the area for most of the Neogene, possibly originating a refugium for these animals in northwestern Europe that persisted until the Late Pliocene (and possibly even the Early Pleistocene). Urodeles such as Palaeoproteus and Mioproteus and anurans such as Latonia, the palaeobatrachids, and possibly Eopelobates are all significant occurrences in such a northern latitude at the end of the Pliocene, a period when southward withdrawal of thermophilic animals as well as the first effects of a deteriorizing climate ultimately leading to the Quaternary glaciation had already started in the European continent.

Andrea Villa. Institut Català de Paleontologia Miquel Crusafont (ICP-CERCA), Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Edifici ICTA-ICP, c/ Columnes s/n, Campus de la UAB, 08193 Cerdanyola del Vallès, Barcelona, Spain. andrea.villa@icp.cat

Loredana Macaluso. Natural Sciences Collections, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Domplatz 4, 06108 Halle (Saale), Germany. loredana.macaluso@zns.uni-halle.de

Thomas Mörs. Department of Palaeobiology, Swedish Museum of Natural History, PO Box 50007, SE 10405, Stockholm, Sweden; Bolin Centre for Climate Research, Department of Environmental Science, Stockholm University, Geovetenskapens hus, Svante Arrhenius väg 8, Stockholm, Sweden.

thomas.moers@nrm.se

Villa A, Macaluso L, Mörs T, felipe (2024). Miocene and Pliocene amphibians from Hambach (Germany): New evidence for a late Neogene refuge in northwestern Europe. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/e5mg5t accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-15.

CC0Published 12/31/2024View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
226325460
Dataset Key
dbf14828-431e-497d-9703-0a53b1864567
Origin
source
Backbone Key
6743
Taxon ID
03F52665D049FF95FE279D2CFC18746E.taxon
Last Crawled
6/9/2026
Last Interpreted
6/9/2026