Chroniosuchus is an extinct reptiliomorph from the upper Permian of Russia. It reached 1.5 metres long.

(Credit Roman Yevseyev, dustdevil)

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Finished all of Zatracheidae yesterday!
Zatrachys, Acanthostomatops and Dasyceps.

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A Gorgonops (gorgon face) returns to the cave it cached leftovers from an earlier meal. These therapsids existed 250 MYA during the Late Permian.

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Permian: Glossopteris and tree ferns

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If I could travel back & change one thing about JP, I'd make it feature more than just Mesozoic species. Especially Permian species cuz the representation from that would likely increase interest & benefit research into Permian fauna. Just imagine seeing Anteosaurus, Rubidgea or-

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day 19: Australerpeton
Day nineteen of and we have the last paleozoic entry with the long snouted rhinesuchid from the late permian of Brazil

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day 17: Peltobatrachus
We arived to the seventeen of with one of the most basal stereospondyl, the armored frog of Tanzania, the late permian

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day 15: Melosaurus
We reach at the equator of and with this, we arrived at the day of a short-snouted archegosaurid of the Russian permian

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day 14: Eryops
And for the fourteenth day of we have a that doesn´t need presentation, one of the most famous Paleozoic tetrapods, a large predator from the early permian of north america

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day 13 : Gerobatrachus
Hopping in for day thirteen of we have the really frog looking a small amphibamiform from the early permian of north america

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day 12 : Acheloma
Coming from the early permian of north america, we have the big nose trematopid for the twelfth day of

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day 11: Dissorophus
The eleventh day of is the day of namesake of its family and bearer of one of the oldest bony armors in tetrapods

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day 10: Platyhystrix
We complete the first third of with the permian sail-back (no, not that one ( no, not that one either)), a mid size dissorophid from Northamerica

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day 9: Cacops
Its the ninth day of and we have the small dissorophid from north america and owner of one of the most nonsensical names, the "ugly looking"

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Gorgonopsid and ginkgo leaves, both of which existed in the permian over 200 million years ago.

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day 8: Zatrachys
With lots of horns and and a misterious hole, we start week two of with the little dragon one of the weirdest looking temnospondyl from the early permian of northamerica

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This hungry Bunostegos (knobbly roof) is a cow-sized parareptile that lived in the central deserts of Gondwana during the late Permian, which was in the midst of the Late Paleozoic Ice Age (260 MYA).

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day 7: Dvinosaurus
To close up the first week of we have the russian dvinosaur a small maybe neotenic from the late permian

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day 6: Trypanognathus
The sixth day of brings us the eel like little german dvinosaurs from the late and early

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day 3: Nigerpeton
And on the third day of we jump from one of the oldest edopoids to the youngest, comming from the late permian of Niger, the mastodonsaur look a like,

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