<p>An ugly cow-sized reptile, resembling a lizard, roamed the ancient super-continent Pangaea over 250 million years ago, just before the first known dinosaurs emerged, a new study has found.<br /><br /></p>.<p>During the Permian era, the Earth was dominated by a single super-continent called Pangea – "All-Earth".<br /><br />Animal and plant life dispersed broadly across this land, as documented by identical fossil species found on multiple modern continents.<br /><br />However, a new study published in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology supports the idea that there was an isolated desert in the middle of Pangea with a fauna all its own.<br /><br />Roaming this desert in what is now northern Niger was a very distinctive creature known as a pareiasaur. Pareiasaurs were large, herbivorous reptiles that were common across Pangea during the Middle and Late Permian, about 266-252 million years ago.<br /><br />"Imagine a cow-sized, plant-eating reptile with a knobby skull and bony armour down its back," said lead author Linda Tsuji. The newly discovered fossils belong to the aptly-named genus Bunostegos, which means (skull) roof."<br /><br />Most pareiasaurs had bony knobs on their skulls, but Bunostegos sported the largest, most bulbous ones ever discovered. In life, these were probably skin-covered horns like those on the heads of modern giraffes.<br /><br />Although at first blush these features seem to suggest that Bunostegos was an evolutionarily advanced pareiasaur, it also had many primitive characteristics.<br /><br />Tsuji's analysis showed that Bunostegos was actually more closely related to older and more primitive pareiasaurs, leading to two conclusions: first, that its knobby noggin was the result of convergent evolution, and second, that its genealogical lineage had been isolated for millions of years.<br /><br />Though there were no fences in the Permian, climatic conditions conspired to corral Bunostegos – along with several other reptiles, amphibians, and plants – and keep them constrained to the central area of the super-continent.<br /><br />"Our work supports the theory that central Pangea was climatically isolated, allowing a unique relict fauna to persist into the Late Permian," said Christian Sidor, another author of the paper.<br /><br />This is surprising because areas outside this central region show fossil evidence of regular faunal interchange.<br /><br />Geological data also show that central Pangea was hyperarid (extremely dry), effectively discouraging some animals from passing through, while keeping those within from venturing out.<br /><br />The long period of isolation under these parched conditions gave Bunostegos lineage time to evolve its unique anatomical features.</p>
<p>An ugly cow-sized reptile, resembling a lizard, roamed the ancient super-continent Pangaea over 250 million years ago, just before the first known dinosaurs emerged, a new study has found.<br /><br /></p>.<p>During the Permian era, the Earth was dominated by a single super-continent called Pangea – "All-Earth".<br /><br />Animal and plant life dispersed broadly across this land, as documented by identical fossil species found on multiple modern continents.<br /><br />However, a new study published in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology supports the idea that there was an isolated desert in the middle of Pangea with a fauna all its own.<br /><br />Roaming this desert in what is now northern Niger was a very distinctive creature known as a pareiasaur. Pareiasaurs were large, herbivorous reptiles that were common across Pangea during the Middle and Late Permian, about 266-252 million years ago.<br /><br />"Imagine a cow-sized, plant-eating reptile with a knobby skull and bony armour down its back," said lead author Linda Tsuji. The newly discovered fossils belong to the aptly-named genus Bunostegos, which means (skull) roof."<br /><br />Most pareiasaurs had bony knobs on their skulls, but Bunostegos sported the largest, most bulbous ones ever discovered. In life, these were probably skin-covered horns like those on the heads of modern giraffes.<br /><br />Although at first blush these features seem to suggest that Bunostegos was an evolutionarily advanced pareiasaur, it also had many primitive characteristics.<br /><br />Tsuji's analysis showed that Bunostegos was actually more closely related to older and more primitive pareiasaurs, leading to two conclusions: first, that its knobby noggin was the result of convergent evolution, and second, that its genealogical lineage had been isolated for millions of years.<br /><br />Though there were no fences in the Permian, climatic conditions conspired to corral Bunostegos – along with several other reptiles, amphibians, and plants – and keep them constrained to the central area of the super-continent.<br /><br />"Our work supports the theory that central Pangea was climatically isolated, allowing a unique relict fauna to persist into the Late Permian," said Christian Sidor, another author of the paper.<br /><br />This is surprising because areas outside this central region show fossil evidence of regular faunal interchange.<br /><br />Geological data also show that central Pangea was hyperarid (extremely dry), effectively discouraging some animals from passing through, while keeping those within from venturing out.<br /><br />The long period of isolation under these parched conditions gave Bunostegos lineage time to evolve its unique anatomical features.</p>