Also known as Pareiasaur, Pareiasaurs, Pareiasaurian
Pareiasaurs (meaning "cheek lizards") are an extinct clade of large, herbivorous reptiles (traditionally considered "parareptiles") that existed during the Permian period. Members of the group were armoured with osteoderms which covered large areas of the body. They first appeared in southern Pangea during the Middle Permian, before becoming globally distributed during the Late Permian. Pareiasaurs were the largest reptiles of the Permian, some reaching sizes over , equivalent to the largest contemporary therapsids. Pareiasaurs became extinct in the end-Permian mass extinction event.
Pareiasaurs (meaning "cheek lizards") are an extinct clade of large, herbivorous reptiles (traditionally considered "parareptiles") that existed during the Permian period. Members of the group were armoured with osteoderms which covered large areas of the body. They first appeared in southern Pangea during the Middle Permian, before becoming globally distributed during the Late Permian. Pareiasaurs were the largest reptiles of the Permian, some reaching sizes over , equivalent to the largest contemporary therapsids. Pareiasaurs became extinct in the end-Permian mass extinction event.
==Description== thumb|200px|left|Restoration of Bradysaurus left|thumb|Size of Scutosaurus, one of the largest pareiasaurs, compared to a human Pareiasaurs ranged in size from long, with the largest pareiasaurs like Scutosaurus and Bradysaurus estimated to exceed in body mass. The limbs of many parieasaurs were extremely robust, likely to account for the increased stress on their limbs caused by their typically sprawling posture. The cow-sized Bunostegos differed from other pareiasaurs by having a more upright limb posture, being amongst the first amniotes to develop this trait. Pareiasaurs were protected by bony scutes called osteoderms that were set into the skin. Their skulls were heavily ornamented with bosses, rugose ridges, and bumps. Their leaf-shaped multi-cusped teeth resemble those of iguanas, indicating a herbivorous diet. The body probably housed an extensive digestive tract. Most authors have assumed a terrestrial lifestyle for pareiasaurs. A 2008 bone microanatomy study suggested a more aquatic, plausibly amphibious lifestyle, but a later 2019 study found that the bone histology provided no direct evidence of this lifestyle, a conclusion also supported by a 2014 isotopic study, which found support for a terrestrial ecology.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).