Rhynchosauroides is an ichnogenus, a form taxon based on footprints. The organism producing the footprints was likely a lepidosaur and may have been a sphenodont, an ancestor of the modern tuatara. The footprint consists of five digits, of which the fifth is shortened and the first highly shortened.
Species
- R. beasleyi <small>Nopsca, 1923</small>
- R. bornemanni <small>Haubold, 1966</small>
- R. brunswickii <small>Ryan and Willard, 1947</small>
- R. gangresci <small>da Silva et al., 2012</small>
- R. hyperbates <small>Baird, 1957</small>
- R. kuletae <small>Baird, 1957</small>
- R. majus <small>Demathieu, 1967</small>
- R. maximus <small>Gand, 1974</small>
- R. minutipes <small>Maidwell, 1914</small>
- R. pallinii <small>Conti et al., 1977</small>
- R. palmatus <small>Lull, 1942</small>
- R. petri <small>Demathieu, 1966</small>
- R. pusillus <small>Haubold, 1966</small>
- R. rdzaneki <small>Ptaszynski, 2000</small>
- R. rectipes <small>Beasley, 1911</small>
- R. retroversipes <small>da Silva et al., 2008</small>
- R. santanderensis <small>Demathieu and Saiz de Omeñaca, 1977</small>
- R. schochardti <small>von Lilienstern, 1939</small>
- R. sphaerodactylus <small>Demathieu, 1971</small>
- R. tirolicus <small>Abel, 1926</small>
- R. triangulus <small>Gand, 1977</small>
- R. virgiliae <small>Demathieu et al., 1978</small>
See also
References