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December 10, 2010

Nearly Complete Dimetrodon Found in Texas

From place to place and year to year, it is a fact of paleontology that some of the best discoveries are made at the very end of the field season. This is not so common that it is some kind of natural law, but it happens quite often, and there is more to it than just luck.

In order to find the fossils they are after, paleontologists must develop a “search image” of what the fossils at a particular place look like and become familiar with the local geology. This fossil intuition takes some time to acquire. By the time fossil hunters are well-versed in the intricacies of the local strata, it is often the end of the season!

Such was the case with the discovery of a nearly complete Dimetrodon skeleton by the Houston Museum of Natural Science (HMNS) field team in Baylor County, Texas. Dimetrodon, despite its reptilian appearance, was not a dinosaur. Not even close. An apex predator during the middle of the Permian (about 280 to 265 million years ago), Dimetrodon was a synapsid—it belonged to a group of vertebrates entirely represented by mammals today. As odd as it might seem, Dimetrodon was actually one of our distant, extinct cousins and not a reptile at all.

According to the museum’s associate curator of paleontology, Dave Temple, the team had been finding bits and pieces of the animal during the field season but did not stumble onto the articulated skeleton until the day before they were due to return home. They were very fortunate to have located it. This specimen has an articulated rib cage, spine and sail, with the skull resting near the rest of the body. The discovery of the animal’s head, especially, is significant as it appears to represent a species, Dimetrodon giganhomogenes, that has been headless since it was first described over a century ago.

The HMNS has big plans for this fossil, nicknamed “Wet Willi.” Even though many Dimetrodon skeletons have been found in Texas, the HMNS does not have one of these animals on display. Once cleaned up and put back together, Willi will be put on exhibit in the museum’s renovated fossil hall, which is due to open in 2012.

For more on Willi and the scientific work being done at the HMNS, check out the Beyond Bones blog.



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1 Comment »

  1. Ken McKeighen Jr. says:

    Greetings from New Mexico. I am a field researcher for the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and I am currently doing field research into the Early Permian Abo Formation in the Abo Pass, NM. When I began my research in 2009 only 3 Dimetrodons were known from New Mexico redbeds. In 2009 Henry McKeighen discovered a nueral spine fragment in the Cayon de Espinosa Member of the Abo Formation. In 2010 I discovered Dimetrodon at a site in Socorro County, NM. In 2011 I discovered several small Dimetrodon specimens at a single site. Since my research began I’ve more than doubled then number of Dimetrodon from the Scholle Member of the Abo Formation, making these the oldest Dimetrodons found except for the Upper Carboniferous specimens (D. milleri). I’ll be continueing my research for the museum for the next five years. In 2013 I will be giving a presentation at the Paleontological conference to be held in Albuequerque, NM. on New Mexico Dimetrodons. It was a childhood dream to actually do research for a museum. I consider it a priveledge to be adding to the knowledge of our planet’s history, and one of our ancestors as well. Thanks for your time and effort. Ken McKeighen Jr.

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