|
|
|
Seymouria
| Scientific Classification |
|
|
| |
Superorder |
Reptiliomorpha |
|
|
|
|
Seymouria was an amphibian in Europe
and North America, during the early Permian period, about 300 million years ago.
Although an amphibian, it had many reptile-like features, and so well was probably
well adapted to living in arid climates.


Seymouria was an amphibian that lived about 300 million years ago

Related Information & Resources
See Also

Seymouria Books Here are some books from Amazon.com:
Disclosure: Products details and descriptions provided by Amazon.com. Our company may receive a payment if you purchase products from them after following a link from this website.
By Michel Laurin
University of California Press Hardcover (216 pages)
 | List Price: $34.95* Lowest New Price: $24.56* Lowest Used Price: $22.34* Usually ships in 24 hours* *(As of 03:32 Pacific 21 May 2012 More Info)
Click Here | Product Description:
More than three hundred million years ago--a relatively recent date in the two billion years since life first appeared--vertebrate animals first ventured onto land. This usefully illustrated book describes how some finned vertebrates acquired limbs, giving rise to more than 25,000 extant tetrapod species. Michel Laurin uses paleontological, geological, physiological, and comparative anatomical data to describe this monumental event. He summarizes key concepts of modern paleontological research, including biological nomenclature, paleontological and molecular dating, and the methods used to infer phylogeny and character evolution. Along with a discussion of the evolutionary pressures that may have led vertebrates onto dry land, the book also shows how extant vertebrates yield clues about the conquest of land and how scientists uncover evolutionary history. |
|
By Alfred Sherwood Romer
Krieger Pub Co Hardcover (800 pages)
 | List Price: $146.85* Lowest New Price: $146.85* Lowest Used Price: $116.95* Usually ships in 24 hours* *(As of 03:32 Pacific 21 May 2012 More Info)
Click Here | Product Description: Based on the work of Samuel Wendell Williston and Dr. W. K. Gregory, author and editor of the original title published in 1925, this volume consists of two major portions -- a structure-by-structure account of the reptile skeleton, followed by a classification of the various reptile groups based on osteological characters. It was designed to give in outline form an account of the nature of the skeletal system of numerous reptile types living and extinct. |
|
Academic Press Hardcover (510 pages)
 | List Price: $190.00* Lowest New Price: $170.28* Lowest Used Price: $11.85* Usually ships in 24 hours* *(As of 03:32 Pacific 21 May 2012 More Info)
Click Here | Product Description: Amniote Origins integrates modern systematic methods with studies of functional and physiological processes, and illustrates how studies of paleobiology can be illuminated by studies of neonatology. For this reason, comparative anatomists and physiologists, functional morphologists, zoologists, and paleontologists will all find this unique volume very useful. Inspired by the prospect of integrating fields that have long been isolated from one another, Amniote Origins provides a thorough and interdisciplinary synthesis of one of the classic transitions of evolutionary history.
Key Features * Integrates modern systematic methods with studies of functional and physiological processes * Illustrates how studies of paleobiology can be illuminated by studies of neonatology * Provides a thorough and interdisciplinary synthesis of one of the classic transitions of evolutionary history |
|
By Jennifer A. Clack
Indiana University Press Hardcover (400 pages)
 | List Price: $49.95* Lowest New Price: $131.08* Lowest Used Price: $42.44* *(As of 03:32 Pacific 21 May 2012 More Info)
Click Here | Product Description:
Around 370 million years ago, a distant relative of a modern lungfish began the most exciting adventure the world had ever seen: it emerged from the water and laid claim to the land. Over the next 70 million years, this tentative beachhead became a worldwide colonization by an ever-increasing variety of four-limbed life. These first "tetrapods" are the ancestors of all vertebrate life on land. Gaining Ground tells the rich and complex story of their emergence and evolution. Beginning with their closest relatives, the lobefin fishes such as lungfishes and coelacanths, Jennifer A. Clack defines the characteristics of tetrapods, describing their anatomy and explaining how they are related to other vertebrates. Clack looks at the Devonian environment in which tetrapods evolved, describes the known species, and explores the order and timing of anatomical changes that occurred during the fish-to-tetrapod transition. She reports that older ideas about the transition are being overturned by recent discoveries and new ideas about evolutionary change. Following the story through the Carboniferous period, she shows how the evolution of terrestrial characters occurred several times, convergently, among different groups. |
|
University Of Chicago Press Paperback (344 pages)
 | List Price: $47.50* Lowest New Price: $47.03* Lowest Used Price: $38.95* Usually ships in 24 hours* *(As of 03:32 Pacific 21 May 2012 More Info)
Click Here | Product Description:
Long ago, fish fins evolved into the limbs of land vertebrates and tetrapods. During this transition, some elements of the fin were carried over while new features developed. Lizard limbs, bird wings, and human arms and legs are therefore all evolutionary modifications of the original tetrapod limb.
A comprehensive look at the current state of research on fin and limb evolution and development, this volume addresses a wide range of subjects—including growth, structure, maintenance, function, and regeneration. Divided into sections on evolution, development, and transformations, the book begins with a historical introduction to the study of fins and limbs and goes on to consider the evolution of limbs into wings as well as adaptations associated with specialized modes of life, such as digging and burrowing. Fins into Limbs also discusses occasions when evolution appears to have been reversed—in whales, for example, whose front limbs became flippers when they reverted to the water—as well as situations in which limbs are lost, such as in snakes.
With contributions from world-renowned researchers, Fins into Limbs will be a font for further investigations in the changing field of evolutionary developmental biology.
(20070914) |
|
By T. E. White
Cambridge Museum of Comparative Zoology Paperback
| Lowest Used Price: $21.00* *(As of 03:32 Pacific 21 May 2012 More Info)
Click Here |
|
By Alfred S Romer
J Geol Unknown Binding
| Lowest Used Price: $10.90* *(As of 03:32 Pacific 21 May 2012 More Info)
Click Here |
|
By P.P. Vaughn
Jour.Paleo. Paperback
| Lowest Used Price: $12.50* *(As of 03:32 Pacific 21 May 2012 More Info)
Click Here |
|
By Michel Laurin
Museum of Paleontology, University of California, Berkeley Unknown Binding (12 pages)
| |
|

Discuss This Page
Linking to This Page
We do hope that you find this site useful.
We welcome people linking to this website, or citing us in their school and educational projects
(remember in school projects and papers, you should always cite your sources).
|
|
|