It has been only within a few years that we have had any knowledge whatever of them, and that knowledge is still very incomplete, too incomplete to justify any attempt to picture them as living animals, even though we take the liberties that some of our illustrators of extinct animals feel warranted in assuming. The first known specimens of these “sea-reptiles”—for that is the meaning of the word Thalattosauria—were discovered and described by Professor J. C. Merriam less than ten years ago, and all our knowledge of these animals is due to the same author, who has studied attentively the known specimens, all of which are preserved in the museum of the University of California. The first discovered fragmentary specimens were confounded with those of early ichthyosaurs, from the Upper Triassic rocks of northern California with which they were associated. No specimen has yet been found that is even approximately complete; some parts of the skeleton are not yet known, even from fragmentary remains, and not till other and more complete specimens have been found will it be possible to determine the real form of the living animals or to decide what their nearest relationships with other reptiles were. Professor Merriam thinks that they were related most closely with the Rhynchocephalia ([p. 176]) of which the Sphenodon, or tuatera, of New Zealand is the only living representative, but whose direct genealogical history runs back nearly or quite to the time in which the thalattosaurs lived. On the other hand, there are so many resemblances to the mosasaurs shown in the remains that have been discovered, that it is possible the thalattosaurs were only a short-lived branch of the primitive lizards, which we also know were in existence at the time when the thalattosaurs lived. However, even though they resembled the mosasaurs, there could have been no direct genealogical relationships between them, for it is quite certain that the thalattosaurs very soon went out of existence, leaving no descendants. But it matters little which were the land forbears of the thalattosaurs; they present such distinct adaptations to water life—characters all their own—that their ancestral kinship may well be left to the future researches of the curious paleontologist. For the present, at least, they may well be placed in an order of reptiles all their own, as Professor Merriam has proposed—the Thalattosauria.

Fig. 82.—Skull of Thalattosaurus.
(After Merriam)

No thalattosaurs were large animals. If they had the same proportions between the lengths of head, body, and tail as the mosasaurs, none exceeded seven feet in length, and they may have been even shorter, though probably not much. The figure of the skull, as restored by Professor Merriam, shows many striking aquatic adaptations, in the elongated, pointed muzzle, in the large external nostrils, situated far back toward the eyes, and in the well-ossified ring of bones surrounding the eyeball. There is a parietal opening in the roof of the skull, as in the modern lizards and tuatera; but it is not known for certainty whether there were two openings on each side in the roof of the skull, as in the modern tuatera. While this character may seem trivial, it is really one of the most important in the reptilian anatomy in determining the relationship and classification of reptiles. The teeth are conical and pointed in the front end of the upper and lower jaws, but farther back they are rounded, rugose, and obtuse, and could have been used only for crushing hard objects, like mollusks, crustaceans, etc. ([Fig. 82]). And not only was there a row of such teeth on each jaw (only partly seen in the figure), but similar teeth covered a large part of the palate. And the lower jaws, it is seen, are rather massive.

The vertebrae were, of course, of the more primitive kind, that is, with the ends concave, both in front and behind. It would have been strange indeed were they of any other kind, since reptiles with ball-and-socket joints to the vertebrae, that is, concave on one end and convex on the other, as in nearly all living reptiles, did not come into existence till long after the thalattosaurs had disappeared from geological history; and it is also a curious fact that such vertebrae appear to have originated only among animals crawling on land, so that they would not have been a character acquired by the thalattosaurs after descending into the water. It will be seen from the figure of a dorsal vertebra that the rib was attached by a single articular surface, almost exclusively to the body of the vertebra, quite like those of all lizards, snakes, and mosasaurs, and unlike those of other reptiles. This too may seem to be a trivial character to prove relationships with the lizards, but it is a curious fact that no two animals having different kinds of ribs are closely related to each other. Possibly, however, this looser mode of attachment of the ribs in the thalattosaurs was one of their peculiar adaptations to a water life, and may not have been derived from their land ancestors.

Fig. 83.—Dorsal vertebra
of Thalattosaurus.
(After Merriam.)

Fig. 84.—Thalattosaurus:
bones of front extremity: s, scapula;
c, coracoid; h, humerus;
r, radius; u, ulna.
(After Merriam.)

Of the limbs, only a few bones are known, but these are very instructive. The arm bones, as shown in [Fig. 84], are strikingly like those of the mosasaurs, as will be seen by comparing the figure on [p. 157]. The humerus is a little more elongated than that of the mosasaurs, more nearly like the mosasaurian femur. The shoulder-blade and the coracoid are imperfectly ossified, as is seen from the figure—another characteristic of aquatic life. What the fingers and toes were like cannot be said; probably they were bound together by membrane, forming swimming paddles similar to those of the mosasaurs. Some of the bones referred to the pelvis are known, but it is not known whether they are united to the spinal column by a sacrum, as in land animals. Nor is anything certainly known of the hind leg or much of the tail. Since the front legs show marked aquatic adaptations, it is altogether certain that the hind legs will be found to be modified more or less, though not so much modified as the front legs, because, as we have seen, the front legs are always more specialized in aquatic animals than the hind ones, even as the hind legs are more specialized than the front ones in land animals. Possibly the hind legs will be found to be more like those of the Thalattosuchia, as shown on [p. 212], that is, partly terrestrial in character. Doubtless the tail was long and flattened, possibly with a terminal fin-like dilation, though this is less probable.