Surangular


The surangular[a] is a jaw bone found in most land vertebrates, except mammals. The surangular makes up the upper portion of the back half of the outside of the lower jaw, behind the dentary, above the angular, and outside the articular. It is the main component of the outer wall of the adductor fossa, where the major jaw-closing muscles attach to the mandible.[5]
The surangular is ancestrally the posteriormost in the series of infradentary bones, which line the outside of the mandible below and behind the dentary bone.[5] It is also known as the fourth infradentary in early sarcopterygians, in which the infradentary series comprises four bones, the first being the splenial, the second the postsplenial, and third being the angular.[6]
In archosaurs there is an opening, the external mandibular fenestra, found between the surangular, dentary, and angular.[5]
In some eucynodonts, the surangular contacted the squamosal to form part of the jaw joint, a characteristic that historically had been interpreted as a predecessor of the dentary-squamosal joint of mammals.[7] The surangular was reduced to a tiny splint as part of the evolution of mammalian auditory ossicles from other bones involved in the jaw joint, and absent in most mammals.[8]
Footnotes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Gregory, William K. (1917-01-01). "Second report of the Committee on the Nomenclature of the Cranial Elements in the Permian Tetrapoda". Bulletin of the Geological Society of America. 28 (1): 973–986. doi:10.1130/GSAB-28-973. ISSN 0016-7606.
- ^ Jollie, Malcolm (1986-02-01). "A primer of bone names for the understanding of the actinopterygian head and pectoral girdle skeletons". Canadian Journal of Zoology. 64 (2): 365–379. doi:10.1139/z86-058. ISSN 0008-4301.
- ^ Schultze, Hans-Peter (2008). "Nomenclature and homologization of cranial bones in actinopterygians". In Arratia, Gloria; Schultze, Hans-Peter; Wilson, Mark V. H. (eds.). Mesozoic fishes 4: Homology and phylogeny. München: Verlag Dr. Friedrich Pfeil. pp. 23–48. ISBN 978-3-89937-080-5.
- ^ a b Baumel, Julian J.; Witmer, Lawrence M. (1993). "Osteologia". Handbook of avian anatomy: nomina anatomica avium. Cambridge, Massachusetts. p. 46.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b c Romer, Alfred Sherwood (1956). The Osteology of the Reptiles. University of Chicago Press.
- ^ Porro, Laura B.; Rayfield, Emily J.; Clack, Jennifer A. (2015-08-21). "Computed tomography, anatomical description and three‐dimensional reconstruction of the lower jaw of Eusthenopteron foordi Whiteaves, 1881 from the Upper Devonian of Canada". Palaeontology. 58 (6). Zerina Johanson (ed.): 1031–1047. doi:10.1111/pala.12192. eISSN 1475-4983. ISSN 0031-0239.
- ^ Rawson, James R. G.; Martinelli, Agustín G.; Gill, Pamela G.; Soares, Marina B.; Schultz, Cesar L.; Rayfield, Emily J. (2024-09-25). "Brazilian fossils reveal homoplasy in the oldest mammalian jaw joint". Nature. 634 (8033). Nature Publishing Group: 381–388. doi:10.1038/s41586-024-07971-3. ISSN 1476-4687.
- ^ Han, Gang; Mao, Fangyuan; Bi, Shundong; Wang, Yuanqing; Meng, Jin (2017-11-01). "A Jurassic gliding euharamiyidan mammal with an ear of five auditory bones". Nature. 551 (7681): 451–456. doi:10.1038/nature24483. eISSN 1476-4687. ISSN 0028-0836.