ICHTHYOSAURIA. 



391 



Sub-class 6. Ichthyosauria. 



Very peculiar large extinct fish-like marine reptiles ivith biconcave verte- 

 brae, four paddle-shaped limbs with very short long-hones ; a large number 

 of phalanges and often more digits than five, with pineal foram,en, pterygoids 

 reaching forward to the vomers, and fixed quadrate. Trias to Cretaceous. 



The Ichthyosauria were large fish-like reptiles, which inhabited the 

 seas of a considerable part of the earth dui-ing the secondary period. 

 Their remains are found in Europe, Africa, America, Austraha, New 

 Zealand, and India. Some of the larger kinds appear to have reached 

 a length of from 30 to 40 feet. They are distingmshed externally by the 

 large size of the head and of the eyes (Fig. 217), by the absence of a neck, 

 by the two pairs of flipper-like appendages, by the dorsal median fins, 

 and by the vertical caudal fin, into the lower lobe of which the vertebral 



Fig. 217. — Ichthyosaurus guadriscissus. A Fossilised skeleton. B Outline restoration show- 

 ing outline of integument with dorsal and caudal fins. L. Jurassic (U. Lias),iWurtemburg 

 (after R. Fraas, from Woodward). 



column is prolonged. The size and form of the head, the absence of the 

 neck and the form of the anterior limb give them a certain superficial 

 resemblance to whales. They have indeed been spoken of as the whales 

 of the Mesozoic seas. That they are true reptiles must be considered 

 certain ; but they stand far apart from other reptiles and cannot be said 

 to show resemblances to one sub-class more than to another. By the 

 presence of a pineal foramen in the roof of the skull and the foi-m of the 

 pectoral girdle they resemble the lizard group ; by the anterior extension 

 of the pterygoid to the vomers, the Rhynchocephalia ; and by the form 

 of the temporal arcade they recall the Anomodontia and Chelonia. 



In the zoological language of the day this isolation in structure with regard 

 to other reptiles is expressed by saying that their descent is unknown ; 

 but in this they do not differ from other reptilian groups, of none of which 



