Palaeopython

Palaeopython
Temporal range: Eocene
Palaeopython fischeri
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Serpentes
Family: Boidae
Genus: Palaeopython
Rochebrune, 1880
Species[1]
  • P. cadurcensis
  • P. ceciliensis
  • P. fischeri

Palaeopython is an extinct genus of snake from the Eocene of the Messel shales, Germany. It was a tree-dwelling snake that reached more than 2 meters in length. Like its modern relatives, the boas, it occasionally dwelled on the ground or in shallow waters close to riverbanks.[2]

Fossil in Vienna

References

  1. An additional species, P. sardus, was described in 1901 by Alessandro Portis from the Middle Miocene of Monte Albu (Sardinia, Italy). See: A. Portis (1901) Il Palaeopython sardus Port. nuovo pitonide del miocene medio della Sardegna. However, a reevaluation of the holotype specimen of this species revealed it to actually belong to an indeterminate acanthomorph fish. See: Massimo Delfino, Daniel Zoboli, Giorgio Carnevale and Gian Luigi Pillola (2014). "The rediscovered holotype of Palaeopython sardus Portis, 1901 from the Miocene of Sardinia belongs to a fish, not to a snake". Bollettino della Società Paleontologica Italiana. 53 (2): 89–92.
  2. http://s206850727.online.de/tinc?key=iY44S7oj&session_currentpage=index&session_mode=guest&formname=Katalog3&session_sortby=field_10&userid=1253309033;510;937&session_nextpage=data_edit&session_offset=50&session_start=1&session_dbkey=1186380724;299753;796_Katalog3&dbkey=1186380724;299753;796_Katalog3
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