Reptiliomorpha is a name given either to reptile-like tetrapods, or to amniotes and those tetrapods related to them.
However Alfred Sherwood Romer used the name Anthracosauria instead, and this has been used until quite recently e.g. Carroll 1988.
In 1956 Friedrich von Huene included both amphibians and anapasid reptiles in the Reptiliomorpha. This included the following orders: 1. Anthracosauria, 2. Seymouriamorpha, 3. Microsauria, 4. Diadectomorpha, 5. Procolophonia, 6. Pareiasauria, 7. Captorhinidia, 8. Testudinata.
In 1997 Michel Laurin and Robert Reisz (1997) adapted the term in a cladistic sense. Michael Benton (2000, 2004) mades it the sister-clade to Batrachomorpha. However, when considered a linnean ranking, Reptiliomorpha is given the rank of superorder and only includes reptile-like amphibians Naturae 2000. More recently Reptiliomorpha has been adopted as the term for the largest clade that includes Homo sapiens but not Ascaphus truei ( a primitive frog) (International Phylogenetic Nomenclature Meeting 2003). Or, as Toby White (Palaeos website) puts it, more like dogs than frogs.
Although the first amniote reptile probably appeared as early as the latest Mississippian period (Middle Carboniferous), reptilomorph tetrapods continued to flourish alongside their fully reptilian descendents and relatives for many millions of years.
By the middle Permian the terrestrial forms had died out, but several aquatic groups continued to the end of the Permain, and in the case of the Chroniosuchids survived the end Permian mass extinction, only to die out at the end of the Early Triassic. Meanwhile, the single most successful daughter-clade of the Reptiliomorphs, the Amniotes, continued to flourish and to inherit the Earth.
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"Reptiliomorpha".
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