Schoenesmahl
Schoenesmahl is an extinct genus of lizard from the Late Jurassic Painten Formation of Germany. It contains only a single species, S. dyspepsia.
Discovery and naming
It is known only from specimen SNSB-BSPG AS I 563b, a single disarticulated specimen.The holotype of S. dyspepsia is preserved in the stomach of the holotype specimen of the small theropod dinosaur Compsognathus longipes, which was discovered by Joseph Oberndorfer in Kelheim, Bavaria no later than 1859. In 1866, Oberndorfer's collection, including the Schoenesmahl dyspepsia and Compsognathus longipes holotype specimens, was acquired by the paleontological state collection in Munich.
Othniel Charles Marsh, who examined the specimen in 1881, thought that this small skeleton in the Compsognathus belly was an embryo, but in 1903, Franz Nopcsa concluded that it was a lizard. In 1978, John Ostrom identified the remains as belonging to a lizard of the genus Bavarisaurus, which he concluded was a fast and agile runner owing to its long tail and limb proportions.
It was moved to the new genus Schoenesmahl in 2018.
The status of the specimen as prey for Compsognathus is reflected in the genus and species name, with Schoenesmahl deriving from schöne Mahl, while dyspepia refers to its undigested nature.