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enjoy some snoozing rubidgea

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Last year's portrait sketch of Moschops capensis, a tapinocephalid dinocephalian from the "Middle" Permian of South Africa. It is the most famous representative of his group. Reaching almost three meters in length, it possessed a massive body typical of tapinocephalids, strong limbs and a short tail. It is assumed that such a physique helped to keep warm. The skull is expanded at the back and has a very thick frontal-parietal region. Perhaps the Moschops were bumping heads or butting heads, trying to sort things out. It is also possible that the well blood supplied integument of the thickened head areas helped to shed excess heat. Teeth with ridges on the lingual (inner) side helped to crush plant food. Several similar genera of dinocephalians have been described, which are now considered synonymous with Moschops.
Paint Tool Sai 2.0, 2024.
Looking for help/recommendations:
Dinosaur books or documentaries - I've watched and read a lot of the popular stuff but always love discovering new ones so let me know any favourite or any more niche ones.
Any book or documentaries about prehistoric animals not dinosaurs focused, any era is fine but I'd really like maybe something aquatic focused, maybe something crocodile focused, and maybe something mammal focused.
Thanks for any recommendations!
A little headshot of a Titanophoneus
Tapinocaninus
Tapinocaninus was a genus of tapinocephalid therapsid from the Middle Permian. Its type and only species is T. pamelae. Its known specimens were found in the Karoo Supergroup in South Africa. Tapinocaninus is the largest known therapsid from the Guadalupian Period.
The generic name Tapinocaninus means humble (tapino) canine (caninus). The specific name pamelae was named for Pam Rubridge, the mother of the original describer, Bruce S. Rubridge. She was on the field when he discovered the first fossils.
Most known Tapinocaninus fossils consist of skulls, though its spine of 36 vertebrae, several ribs, pectoral and pelvic girdles, three humeri, and a femur have been discovered. Its autapomorphies include a relatively large temporal opening, only having two sacral vertebrae, only seven caudal vertebrae, a notably high amount of vertebral intercentra, an anterior coracoid included in the glenoid, which is straight and facing posteroventrally, and the lack of ectepicondylar foramen.
Tapinocaninus has been recovered as the most basal member of Tapinocephalidae, as it has both derived dinocephalian features and ancestral features of sphenacodonts. Tapinocephalidae itself is the most derived family of Dinocephalia.
Original paper: Rubridge 1991, Postcranial materials description 2019
Wikipedia article: here

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The World of Dinosaurs. Written by L. B. Halstead. 1979.
Internet Archive
There’s this Really cool channel on YouTube Called The Ophaur Den.
It’s a Speculative Evolution channel. They are trying the write a book about therocephalians that survived to the modern day (a group of early mammal like animals ) called OPHAURS !
(THIS IS NOT MY CHANNEL )
To whoever sees this you should check it out!
Welcome to The Ophaur Den! This spec evo channel covers the history and biology of a species called the Ophaur. I plan to make a few books a
I really liked that front and centre of the paleontology hall at the Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde were not dinosaur skeletons, but three synapsids. Much of the rock in the area is red sandstone from the Permian and Triassic (in fact I noticed while hiking in the Pfälzerwald that even the molehills were red!) so there’s been plenty of our own stem-relatives found here. These three are Dimetrodon, Gorgonops, and Tetragonias.