Tanyka amnicola was a tetrapodomorph closely related to both the baphetoids and true tetrapods, living in what is now northeastern Brazil during the Permian around 278 million years ago — making it one of the latest-surviving known stem-tetrapods.
Although only known from lower jaw remains it was likely about 1m long (~3'3"), and would have resembled a large chunky salamander.
Those jaws were particularly unusual, having a distinct twist in the bone that made the teeth towards the front stick out sideways when its mouth was closed. However, this twisting brought a different set of teeth into alignment with the upper jaw — "pavements" of many small denticles on the inner side of the lower jaw, which may have been used to rasp up aquatic plants or grind small invertebrates.
Tanyka's highly specialized feeding adaptations suggest that late-surviving stem-tetrapods in Permian Gondwana weren't just evolutionary relics but were instead actively exploring new niches, and that the extinction of these animals wasn't quite as simple as just being outcompeted by more "advanced" tetrapods.
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References:
Field Museum. "This ancient plant-eater had a twisted jaw and sideways-facing teeth." Field Museum Press Room, 02 Mar. 2026, https://www.fieldmuseum.org/about/press/this-ancient-plant-eater-had-a-twisted-jaw-and-sideways-facing-teeth
Pardo, Jason D., et al. "An aberrant stem tetrapod from the early Permian of Brazil." Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 293.2066 (2026). https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2025.2106
Wikipedia contributors. “Tanyka” Wikipedia, 18 Mar. 2026, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanyka
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PBS Eons: Crawling Out Of The Water Was An Evolutionary Accident
It’s beginning to look like our success on land, and that of all tetrapods, from frogs to dogs to dinosaurs, was just a lucky side-effect of fish trying to stay fish.
Of the stem tetrapodomorphs, this may be the first one to have lost their fish-like gills. They were the first Devonian tetrapod discovered in the USA– the first of many!
Ichthyostega stensioei was a stegocephalian tetrapodomorph from the Late Devonian of Greenland. Despite some characterizations of it as a true tetrapod akin to a giant salamander, its limbs and joints were very primitive, with only its forelimbs adapted to some terrestrial weight-bearing. This would’ve allowed it to haul itself up onto the shores of its wetland environment, an adaptation that would be further tweaked and improved upon as tetrapods made more prolonged and even permanent moves onto land.
a limited palette and my first attempt at making a very-dead creature look realistic
i probably should have just used a normal palette to color him in but it's FINE
this is a crassigyrinus -- he existed in the mississippian, about 350 mya
he is a stem-tetrapod, so his efforts to make it onto land were futile and ended with him
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Gaiasia jennyae was a tetrapodomorph – an amphibian-like relative of early tetrapods – that lived about 280 million years ago during the early Permian in what is now Namibia.
Although it's only known from incomplete skull and vertebral column material it probably looked quite similar to the colosteids, a closely-related group of tetrapodomorphs with elongated bodies and small limbs. If it had the same sort of body proportions as these relatives it would have been huge, the largest known stem-tetrapod at potentially around 4m long (~13').
It had a wide flat head with a short boxy snout, and large interlocking fangs on the roof of its mouth and at the front of its lower jaw. It would have been fully aquatic and probably not a particularly fast swimmer, instead likely being an ambush predator using suction from rapidly opening its jaws to pull prey into its mouth before clamping down with its fangs.
It's also notable for living considerably later than most other stem-tetrapods, and in an unexpected part of the world. While its close relatives are all known from the tropics of the Carboniferous, Gaiasia was in a location that was much closer to the South Pole during the early Permian (~55° S), inhabiting an immense freshwater lake in a rift valley with a cold-temperate climate.
Its presence in this habitat may suggest that other stem-tetrapod lineages survived and thrived in high latitudes for much longer than previously thought, while the true tetrapods were all diversifying nearer the equator – or it might represent a Paleozoic equivalent of Koolasuchus, an isolated straggler lurking in a cold refugium.
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References:
Marsicano, Claudia A., et al. "Giant stem tetrapod was apex predator in Gondwanan late Palaeozoic ice age." Nature (2024): 1-6. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07572-0
Naish, Darren. "'The whole front of the mouth is just giant teeth.' Prehistoric swamp monster with toilet-seat head dug up in Namibia." Discover Wildlife, 3 Jul. 2024, https://www.discoverwildlife.com/animal-facts/gaiasia-jennyae
Stollhofen, Harald, et al. "AAPG Studies in Geology# 46, Chapter 6: The Gai-As Lake System, Northern Namibia and Brazil." (2000): 87-108. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/255979661_The_Gai-As_Lake_System_Northern_Namibia_and_Brazil
Wikipedia contributors. “Gai-As Formation.” Wikipedia, 8 Jul. 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gai-As_Formation
Wikipedia contributors. “Gaiasia.” Wikipedia, 8 Jul. 2024, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaiasia