Synapsid: Difference between revisions

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'''Synapsida''' was a pre-mammalian reptile and believed to be the ancestor of mammals due to the similar shape of their skulls. Synapsida were the dominant land animals of the Late Carboniferous (Pennsylvanian) period to the Permian period which we start to see from about 300 million years ago, though they were more abundant and more diversified in the beginning of the Permian period, around 270 million years ago. Synapsida is the subclass,
'''Synapsida''' was a pre-mammalian reptile and believed to be the ancestor of mammals due to the similar shape of their skulls. Synapsida were the dominant land animals of the Late Carboniferous (Pennsylvanian) period to the Permian period which we start to see from about 300 million years ago, though they were more abundant and more diversified in the beginning of the Permian period, around 270 million years ago.




''This article is currently being developed as part of a student project for an Anthropology course at the University of Colorado at Boulder. If you are not involved with this project, please do not further develop this article until otherwise noted. Thank you. ''
''This article is currently being developed as part of a student project for an Anthropology course at the University of Colorado at Boulder. If you are not involved with this project, please do not further develop this article until otherwise noted. Thank you. ''

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Synapsida was a pre-mammalian reptile and believed to be the ancestor of mammals due to the similar shape of their skulls. Synapsida were the dominant land animals of the Late Carboniferous (Pennsylvanian) period to the Permian period which we start to see from about 300 million years ago, though they were more abundant and more diversified in the beginning of the Permian period, around 270 million years ago.


This article is currently being developed as part of a student project for an Anthropology course at the University of Colorado at Boulder. If you are not involved with this project, please do not further develop this article until otherwise noted. Thank you.