Lentamanusuchus

An illustration of the extinct marine reptile Lentamanusuchus swimming in silty water. It has a long beak-like toothless snout, a streamlined body with a row of small armor plates along its spine, four large broad paddle-like flippers, and a long eel-like tail. It's depicted colored mottled brown.

Lentamanusuchus hubeiensis was a small marine reptile that lived during the early Triassic, about 248 million years ago, in shallow tropical seas covering what is now southwestern China.

It was part of a group known as hupehsuchians, early cousins of ichthyosaurs that had toothless jaws, paddle-shaped limbs, eel-like tails, and distinctive bony armor along their backs.

Around 1.2m long (~4′), Lentamanusuchus had particularly broad flippers with extra bones in its hands, a transitional state between its ancestors and later polydactylous hupehsuchians.

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