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Hynerpeton bassetti

Hynerpeton
Temporal range: 360 Ma
Late Devonian
Hynerpeton BW.jpg
Hynerpeton reconstruction
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Batrachomorpha
Order: "Ichthyostegalia"
Family: Ichthyostegidae
Genus: Hynerpeton
Species: H. bassetti
Binomial name
Hynerpeton bassetti
Daeschler et al., 1994

Hynerpeton (/hˈnɜːrpətɒn/; from Greek Υνηρπετον "creeping animal from Hyner") was a basal carnivorous tetrapod that lived in the lakes and estuaries of the Late Devonian period around 360 million years ago. Like many primitive tetrapods, it is sometimes referred to as an "amphibian" in reference to its reproduction, though it is not a member of the modern Lissamphibia.

The structure of the shoulder girdle indicates this animal may have been one of the earlier, more primitive tetrapods to evolve during the Devonian.

In 1993, the paleontologists Ted Daeschler and Neil Shubin found the first Hynerpeton fossil, a shoulder bone, near Hyner, Pennsylvania, USA. They were surveying the Devonian rocks of Pennsylvania in search of fossil evidence for the origin of animal limbs. The initial find was a very robust shoulder bone, which indicated that the animal had powerful appendages. Only a few Hynerpeton bones have been found there at Red Hill, Pennsylvania. These include two shoulder girdles, two lower jaws, a jugal bone and some gastralia.

It is thought that these early amphibians are descended from lobe-finned fish, such as Hyneria, whose stout fins evolved into legs and their swim bladder into lungs. It is still unknown whether Hynerpeton is the ancestor to all later backboned land animals (including humans), but it had eight fingers, not five, "...suggests that it is simply our evolutionary cousin"(Haines 31).


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