3IO CLASSIFICATION OF VERTEBRATES. 



tropics the terrestrial species sleep through the dry season 

 The group appears in the Permian of North America, and has 

 continued until the present. 



SUB-ORDER i. CHELYDOSAURIA. 



No temporal fossa ; carapace of transverse osseous arches in close con- 

 tact, extending across the back from side to side. Vertebras amphiccelous ; 

 limbs ambulatory. This sub-order, represented by Otocalus from the Per- 

 mian of North America, is regarded by Cope as ancestral to the other 

 chelonia and the pseudosuchian crocodilia. 



SUB-ORDER 2. ATHEC/E. 



Turtles without scales but with a leathery skin, carapace of polygonal 

 dermal bony plates arranged in rows, unconnected with ribs and vertebras ; 

 plastron poorly developed, with large central fontanelle ; episternum lacking. 

 Skull without descending process of parietals. Feet flipper-like, claws lack- 

 ing. Dermochelys (Sp/iargis) cormcea, the leather-back tortoise, occurs 

 in all warmer seas, extending north to Cape Cod. It weighs occasionally 

 1,500 Ibs. The sub-order appears (Psephoderma) in the trias. P?-otostega, 

 cretaceous of Kansas. 



SUB-ORDER 3. TRIONYCHIA. 



Turtles with the carapace poorly ossified, ribs and vertebras being 

 connected with it. Scales lacking, the body covered with a leathery skin ; 

 marginal bones few or absent. Plastron with episternum and a large me- 

 dian fontanelle; sacral and caudal ribs articulating with neural arches. 

 A descending process of the parietals present. Feet webbed, three claws 

 on each foot. The sub-order appears in the upper cretaceous of New 

 Jersey, and is represented by over thirty species to-day, all inhabitants of 

 fresh water, and best developed in the Oriental regions. All are carnivor- 

 ous. Four species of leather turtle (Amyda) and soft-shell turtles (As- 

 pidonectes} in the U. S. 



SUB-ORDER 4. CRYPTODIRA. 



Turtles with well-ossified carapace, connected with internal skeleton ; 

 epidermal scales and marginal ossicles present; an episternum; pelvis free 

 from plastron ; caudal ribs articulated to vertebral centra. A descending 

 process to the parietals. The species are numerous, the more important 

 families being the following : CHELONID.E, with heart-shaped carapace, and 

 paddle-like feet, bearing at most two claws. The costal plates do not 

 reach the marginals. Thalassochelys caretta, the loggerhead turtle, weighs 

 450 Ibs. Eretmochelys imbricata, the tortoise-shell turtle, is smaller. The 

 green turtle, Chelone mydas, may weigh 850 Ibs. It is highly esteemed as 



