File:Image from page 202 of "Water reptiles of the past and present" (1914) (14750061026).jpg
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[edit]DescriptionImage from page 202 of "Water reptiles of the past and present" (1914) (14750061026).jpg |
Identifier: waterreptilesofp1914will Title: Water reptiles of the past and present Year: 1914 (1910s) Authors: Williston, Samuel Wendell, 1851-1918 Subjects: Aquatic reptiles Publisher: Chicago, Ill., The University of Chicago Press Contributing Library: Boston Public Library Digitizing Sponsor: Boston Public Library
Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.
Text Appearing After Image: Fig. 96.—Belodon; restoration of head, Fig. 97.—Mystriosuchus; restoration from above. of head, from above. 192 WATER REPTILES OF THE PAST AND PRESENT gavials. In some forms the teeth are cylindrical and slenderthroughout, and there may be as many as fifty on each jaw, ortwo hundred in all; while in others only the anterior teeth arecylindrical and the posterior teeth are flattened and serrate alongtheir cutting edges. In the body not very great differences havebeen observed. Some are more slender than others, and there areminor differences in the shapes and sizes and numbers of the bonyscutes along the back and on the throat. But they are all alike in their essential characters, a very longbeak with numerous teeth; the foremost ones on the expanded,more or less spoon-shaped front extremity, are more or less, some-times greatly, elongated. The jaws may be likened to a long andslender pair of tongs with nipping teeth at the front end. Thestrong, long, and flattened tail is sufficie
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Source | Image from page 202 of "Water reptiles of the past and present" (1914) |
Author | Internet Archive Book Images |
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