Thadeosaurus
Thadeosaurus is an extinct genus of diapsid reptiles from the late Permian Lower Sakamena Formation of Madagascar. The genus contains a single species, Thadeosaurus colcanapi, known from several specimens preserved as natural molds.
Discovery and naming
The generic name, Thadeosaurus, is an anagram of "Datheosaurus", a synapsid genus to which fossils of the former were initially referred. The specific name, colcanapi, honors J.-M. Colcanap, a French infantry captain and the discoverer of the holotype specimen.Description
Thadeosaurus was a superficially lizard-like reptile, with a remarkably long tail that comprised about two-thirds of the animal's total length of. It had long toes, especially on the hind legs, and a strong breast bone.Classification
The relationships of Thadeosaurus have been debated since its 1981 description. Prior to receiving a name, the fossil material was provisionally referred to Broomia, Tangasaurus, and Datheosaurus. In his 1981 publication naming Thadeosaurus and Claudiosaurus, Carroll noted similarities between Thadeosaurus and Youngina, but opted to describe it as a 'primitive' sauropterygian—an 'ancestral taxon' to nothosaurs and plesiosaurs.In the description of the early Permian reptile Orovenator, the phylogenetic results of Reisz et al. suggested a close relationship between Thadeosaurus and Youngina, united in the family Younginidae. These results are displayed in the cladogram below:
In 2025, Valentin Buffa and colleagues thoroughly redescribed the fossil material assigned to Thadeosaurus, and reassessed its phylogenetic position. They identified it as a member of the neodiapsid family Tangasauridae, as the sister taxon to the clade formed by Hovasaurus and Tangasaurus, a position also supported by Philip J. Currie in a publication redescribing Tangasaurus. The results of the strict consensus phylogenetic results of Buffa et al. are displayed in the cladogram below: