There are more species of lizards and snakes alive today than any other order of land vertebrates, yet their fossil record has been poorly documented compared with other groups. Paleontologists have now described a new species of gigantic skink from the Pleistocene of Australia based on the fossilized material that includes much of the skull and postcranial skeleton.
Tiliqua frangens lived during the Pleistocene, alongside the famous megafauna such as marsupial lions, diprotodons and short-faced kangaroos.
At approximately 2.4 kg, the ancient species was more than double the mass of any living skink, with an exceptionally broad, deep skull, squat limbs and heavy, ornamented body armor.
It probably filled the armored herbivore niche that land tortoises, absent from Australia, occupy on other continents.
“Tiliqua frangens was 1,000 times bigger than the common Australian garden skinks (Lampropholis guichenoti), which weigh about 2 g, and has a unique chunky, spiked profile,” said Western Australian Museum paleontologist Kailah Thorn.
“It reveals that even small creatures were supersized during the Pleistocene.”
Tiliqua frangens was pieced together from bones unearthed from ongoing excavations at Wellington Caves in New South Wales and from fossils already held in museums around Australia.
“In the dig at Wellington Caves, we started finding these spiked armored plates that that had surprisingly never been recorded before,” said Flinders University paleontologist Diana Fusco.
“We knew we had something interesting and unique.”
Tiliqua frangens is believed to be related to the living shingleback or sleepy lizard (Tiliqua rugosa), but is even larger and more heavily armored.
“These large, slow armored lizards might have filled the ecological niche of small land tortoises, absent from modern Australia,” said Professor Michael Lee, a paleontologist at Flinders University and South Australian Museum.
The extinction of Tiliqua frangens coincides…
Read the full article here