Abstract

ABSTRACT The Madtsoiidae are an extinct lineage of snakes known from the Late Cretaceous to the Late Pleistocene, with a rich fossil record distributed mainly across Gondwanan landmasses. However, only a few taxa are represented by cranial or articulated remains, and most madtsoiids are known only by isolated vertebrae. The unambiguous record of Madtsoiidae from the Cenozoic in South America had been restricted to the genus Madtsoia from Eocene and Oligocene deposits of Patagonia and Brazil. Here, we describe a new madtsoiid taxon, Powellophis andina gen. et sp. nov., based on an articulated postcranial skeleton from the Mealla Formation (middle–late Paleocene) in northwestern Argentina. The new taxon is estimated to be around 3 meters long, with a vertebral morphology sharing similar features with other mid-to-large forms. Its inclusion in a recent analysis of madtsoiid relationships recovers Powellophis as an early member of a clade formed by mostly large bodied and gigantic taxa. Its presence in the Paleocene of northwestern Argentina fills the gap between the diverse Late Cretaceous and Eocene–Oligocene records of madtsoiids in South America, confirms their presence in northern Gondwana by the early Paleogene, and expands the diversity of the group.

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