. A manual of zoology. Zoology. 594r CIIORDATA. divided into two groups, tlie Lejoidosauria, containing the lizards, snakes and Sphemidon, and the Ilydrosanria with turtles and croc- odiles. This, however, ignores the fossil forms. When these are taken into consideration another grouping must be adopted. Order I. Theromorpha. Extinct reptiles fi'om the Permian and triassic which are closely re- lated to the stegoceplialous amphibia; with amphiocBlous vertebras, im- movable quadrate, and from two to six sacral vertebrae. The Anomobon- TiA, with partial or comjjlete loss of teeth, stand near the


. A manual of zoology. Zoology. 594r CIIORDATA. divided into two groups, tlie Lejoidosauria, containing the lizards, snakes and Sphemidon, and the Ilydrosanria with turtles and croc- odiles. This, however, ignores the fossil forms. When these are taken into consideration another grouping must be adopted. Order I. Theromorpha. Extinct reptiles fi'om the Permian and triassic which are closely re- lated to the stegoceplialous amphibia; with amphiocBlous vertebras, im- movable quadrate, and from two to six sacral vertebrae. The Anomobon- TiA, with partial or comjjlete loss of teeth, stand near the turtles, while the Theeiodonta, in which a heterodont dentition is developed, resemble in this and some otlier respects the mammals, which, by many, are sup- posed to have descended from them. Order II. Plesiosauria. Extinct aquatic forms from the triassic to the cretaceous, some forty feet in length. They had long necks, and the limbs were modified into swimming paddles recalling the flippers of the whales. The quadrate was immovable, and the jaws, with numerous teeth in sockets, were long. Order III. Ichthyosauria. These forms resembled the Plesiosaurs in skin, swimming feet, elongate jaws, and quadrate, but had the teeth (sometimes absent) in grooves rather. Fig. 622.—Restoration of Plcsiosaur. (After Dames.) than in sockets, and short necks. Some species at least were viviparous. Their range in time was like that of the preceding order. Order IV. Chelonia (Testudinata). The turtles form in external appearance a sharply circumscribed group, with the short and compiact body enclosed in a bony case, from, which only head, tail, and legs protrude (fig. G'.33). The case consists of a convex dorsal portion, the carapace and a flat- tened ventral plastron, the two being united in most forms at the margins. Bacli consists of bony plates, the positions and names of which may be learned from tlio adjacent cut. It only needs mention that the neural plates arc united with the spinou


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectzoology, bookyear1902