Ovoo gurvel
Ovoo gurvel is an extinct varanid lizard from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia. It is one of the smallest and earliest monitor lizards. It was described in 2008. Ovoo possesses a pair of small bones in its skull that are not seen in any other lizard.
Description and history
Ovoo is only known from a fossilized skull cataloged as IGM 3/767 and designated the holotype. The skull was discovered in 2001 near the rich Ukhaa Tolgod fossil site in a locality known as Little Ukhaa. The deposits at Little Uhhaa date back to the Campanian stage of the Late Cretaceous. The generic name is derived from the name of a type of cairn called ovoos that are found along roads near Little Ukhaa. The specific name, gurvel, comes from the Mongolian word for lizard.Ovoo was very small compared to living monitor lizards, with the exception of the Short-tailed monitor. Nevertheless, the structures of its skull are very similar to those of living monitors. Ovoo shares many similarities with the extinct monitors Aiolosaurus and Cherminotus, which are also known from Little Ukhaa and Ukhaa Tolgod. Differences between these genera are seen in the shape of the bones in the skull. The distinguishing features of Ovoo include:
- Nasals, located behind the nostril openings, that are divided into two bones.
- The large size of a pair of holes called premaxillary fenestrae in front of the nostril openings.
- A bone called the septomaxilla that separates the premaxilla from the maxilla.
- The small size of a hole in the septomaxilla bone called the septomaxillary foramen.