This order includes a number of extinct marine reptiles, devoid of an exoskeleton. The tail is short, the trunk long, and the neck in the most typical forms extremely long. The vertebrae have slightly biconcave, or nearly flat centra. The skull is relatively small and has large supratemporal fossae. The teeth are placed in distinct sockets, and are generally confined to the margins of the jaws; they are sharp and curved and are coated with grooved enamel. The premaxillae are large, and there is an interparietal foramen. The quadrate is firmly united to the cranium. The anterior nares are separate and are placed somewhat close to the orbits. There is no ossified sclerotic ring. The palatines and pterygoids meet the vomers, and more or less completely close the palate, and in some forms, e.g. Plesiosaurus, there is a distinct parasphenoid. Thoracic ribs are strongly developed and each articulates with its vertebra by a single head. The cervical vertebrae have well-marked ribs, which articulate only with the centra, in this respect differing from those of Crocodiles. The caudal vertebrae bear both ribs and chevron bones, and abdominal splint-ribs are largely developed.

In the shoulder-girdle the coracoids are large and meet in a ventral symphysis; precoracoids and a sternum are apparently absent, but parts generally regarded[71] as the clavicles and interclavicle are well developed. In the pelvis, the pubes and ischia meet in a long symphysis. The limbs are pentedactylate, and in the best known forms, the Plesiosauridae, form swimming paddles.

The Sauropterygia occur in beds of Secondary age, and some of the best known genera are Plesiosaurus, Pliosaurus and Nothosaurus.

Order 3. Chelonia.

In the Tortoises and Turtles the body is enclosed in a bony box, formed of the dorsal carapace, and a flat ventral buckler, the plastron. Except in Dermochelys the carapace is partly formed from the vertebral column and ribs, partly from dermal bones. Both carapace and plastron are, except in Dermochelys, Trionyx and their allies, covered with an epidermal exoskeleton of horny plates, which are regularly arranged, though their outlines do not coincide with those of the underlying bones. The thoracic vertebrae have no transverse processes, and are quite immovably fixed, but the cervical and caudal vertebrae are very freely movable. There are no lumbar vertebrae. The skull is extremely solid, and frequently has a very complete false roof. Teeth have been detected in embryos of Trionyx but with this exception the jaws are toothless, and are encased in horny beaks. The quadrate is firmly fixed. The facial part of the skull is very short, and the alisphenoidal and orbitosphenoidal regions are unossified. In living forms there are no separate nasal bones, while large prefrontals and postfrontals are developed. There is a comparatively complete bony palate chiefly formed of the palatines and pterygoids. The anterior nares are united and placed at the anterior end of the skull, and the premaxillae are very small. There is no transpalatine bone and the vomer is unpaired. The dentaries are generally fused together.

There are ten pairs of ribs, and each rib has only a single head and is partially attached to two vertebrae; there are no cervical or sternal ribs. There is no true sternum.

The three anterior elements of the plastron are respectively homologous with the interclavicle and two clavicles of other reptiles, while the remaining elements of the plastron are probably homologous with the abdominal ribs of Crocodiles. The pectoral girdle lies within the ribs, and the precoracoids and coracoids do not meet in ventral symphyses. The scapula and precoracoid are ossified continuously. The pubis probably corresponds with the pre-pubis of Dinosaurs. There are four limbs each with five digits.

The order includes three suborders:—

Suborder (1). Trionychia.

The carapace and plastron have a rough granular surface covered with skin and without any horny shields.