Pectoral limbs of a Platecarpus sp., Ichthyosaurus conybeari, and Ichthyosaurus intermedius from A Guide to the Fossil Reptiles and Fishes in the Department of Geology and Paleontology in the British Museum (Natural History), 1896.
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Pectoral limbs of a Platecarpus sp., Ichthyosaurus conybeari, and Ichthyosaurus intermedius from A Guide to the Fossil Reptiles and Fishes in the Department of Geology and Paleontology in the British Museum (Natural History), 1896.

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Happy World Lizard Day 2020 (yes, I'm late). Anyway, here's Aigialosaurus dalmaticus ("seashore lizard of Dalmatia"), a basal, semi-aquatic mosasauroid that lived in what's now Hvar Island, Croatia, about 99 - 94 million years ago (Late Cretaceous).
As its name suggests, Aigialosaurus was a semi-aquatic lizard that might've strongly resembled a salvator monitor in morphology. It still possesses primitive traits such as limbs with functional digits, nostrils that are close to the tip of the snout, and less-developed or probably lack of caudal fin.
It grew to only about 1.1 metres long, just a bit larger than the smallest mosasauroid, Dallasaurus. Well, after all, everyone always start from a humble origin.