Abstract
Cranial fragments associated with the holotype of Necrosuchus ionensis reveal a dorsally shifted foramen aereum on the quadrate and a long, slender descending process of the exoccipital lateral to the basioccipital and approaching the basioccipital tubera. The former suggests that Necrosuchus is an alligatoroid and not a crocodylid, as first suggested; and the latter that it is a caiman. The scapulocoracoid shows evidence of early closure of the synchondrosis, further supporting a caiman affinity. Although we cannot yet pinpoint the phylogenetic placement of Necrosuchus amongst caimans, it nevertheless establishes a caimanine presence in South America by the Early Palaeocene. A review of other Palaeocene–Eocene caimans reveals a complex biogeographical history suggesting multiple dispersal events between North and South America, even if the modern caiman assemblage is monophyletic. © 2011 The Linnean Society of London, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2011, 163, S228–S256.
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