2000
DOI: 10.1126/science.287.5460.2010
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A Fossil Snake with Limbs

Abstract: A 95-million-year-old fossil snake from the Middle East documents the most extreme hindlimb development of any known member of that group, as it preserves the tibia, fibula, tarsals, metatarsals, and phalanges. It is more complete than Pachyrhachis, a second fossil snake with hindlimbs that was recently portrayed to be basal to all other snakes. Phylogenetic analysis of the relationships of the new taxon, as well as reanalysis of Pachyrhachis, shows both to be related to macrostomatans, a group that includes r… Show more

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Cited by 207 publications
(221 citation statements)
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“…The Round Island boas Casarea dussumieri and Bolyeria multicarinata are of relatively small size compared to most other booids, yet they are nested deeply inside the latter (Underwood, 1976;Tchernov et al, 2000;Lee and Scanlon, 2002;Apesteguia and Zaher, 2006;Scanlon, 2006). Thus, some degree of paedomorphosis may be expected, as was indeed noted by Anthony and Guibé (1952).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 84%
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“…The Round Island boas Casarea dussumieri and Bolyeria multicarinata are of relatively small size compared to most other booids, yet they are nested deeply inside the latter (Underwood, 1976;Tchernov et al, 2000;Lee and Scanlon, 2002;Apesteguia and Zaher, 2006;Scanlon, 2006). Thus, some degree of paedomorphosis may be expected, as was indeed noted by Anthony and Guibé (1952).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 84%
“…2;Tchernov et al, 2000;Apesteguia and Zaher, 2006). These phylogenetic hypotheses stand in stark contrast to the recent findings based on molecular data, which place bolyeriids as sister-taxon to a clade that includes the uropeltines (traditionally considered non-macrostomatan), Acrochordus and colubroids, whereas the tropidophiids were found to be the sister-taxon of the non-macrostomatan genus Anilius (Vidal and Hedges, 2004; see also Vidal and David, 2004).…”
mentioning
confidence: 71%
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“…Our results corroborate Lawson et al (2005) in positioning Acrochordus as the sister group to all other caenophidians. A sister-group relationship between Acrochordus and other caenophidians is a wellsupported hypothesis in all recent morphological phylogenetic analyses (Tchernov et al, 2000;Lee & Scanlon, 2002;Apesteguía & Zaher, 2006), as well as other molecular studies and combined molecular/ morphological analyses (Gravlund, 2001;Lee et al, 2004; and references therein). In contrast, Kelly et al (2003) and Kraus & Brown (1998) found Acrochor-dus to cluster with Xenodermus-Achalinus (Xenodermatinae); in addition, Kraus & Brown (1998) found their Acrochordus-xenodermatine clade to cluster well within other caenophidians.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%