Macromerion Temporal range: Late Carboniferous,
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Genus: | †Macromerion Fritsch, 1879
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†Macromerion schwartzenbergii Fritsch, 1885? (Romer, 1945)
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Macromerion (Macro- is Greek/Latin for “large”) is an extinct genus of non-mammalian synapsids, specifically Pelycosaurs, in the family Sphenacodontidae from Late Carboniferous deposits in the Czech Republic.[1][2][3] It was named as a species of Labyrinthodon in 1875 and as its own genus in 1879.[4]
Macromerion was one of the moderate to large-sized Spenacodontids and represented the most dominant terrestrial predators from the Late Carboniferous and Early Permian, which means they lived about 300 million years ago.[5] It is a "sail-backed" synapsid, exhibiting sizable parallel-fibered and fibrolamellar bone, along with lamellar bone.[6] The family of Macromerion, Sphenacodontids, is a sister taxon of Therapsids. The understanding of this relationship plays an important part in understanding the mammalian features of Pelycosaurs and all synapsids.[5] Fossils of this species and other Pelycosaurs were mostly found in regions of North America and Western Europe.[7]