Wing-backed "dinosaur" Dimetrodons were not really dinosaurs, but more related to Mammals!
Often confused for a dinosaur, Dimetrodon is actually a prehistoric synapsid, making it more closely related to mammals (including humans) than to a Tyrannosaurus Rex.This predator ruled the Earth roughly 295 to 272 million years ago during the Early Permian period—finishing its reign nearly 40 million years before the first dinosaurs ever appeared.
(Photo: Dimetrodon Skull. Credit: Wikimedia.Jeff Kubina Columbia, Maryland)ABOUT THE DIMETRODON
The Back Sail: Its most striking feature is a large dorsal sail formed by elongated neural spines extending from its vertebrae. While paleontologists once believed it was strictly for thermoregulation (warming up in the sun), current theories also suggest it served as a display to attract mates or intimidate rivals.
Unique Teeth: Its name means "two measures of teeth." Unlike the uniform teeth of reptiles, Dimetrodon possessed heterodont dentition— that is, different types of teeth used for different tasks, such as sharp canines for piercing and serrated teeth for shearing flesh.
Size: Depending on the species, Dimetrodon could grow between 5.6 to 15 feet (1.7 and 4.6 meters) in length and weighed as much as 550 pounds (250 kg). It walked with a sprawling, four-legged gait similar to a modern crocodile.
What Dimetrodon's Ate: A variety of prey including freshwater fish, amphibians like Eryops, and early land-dwelling herbivores.
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ABOUT THE PERMIAN PERIOD- and WHY the "Great Extinction"
- Significance: It was a defining turning point in Earth's history, transitioning from a cooler early climate to extreme heat, arid deserts, and the assembly of the supercontinent Pangea (all continents combined into 1 massive landmass), which profoundly affected global weather patterns and habitats.
- The End Extinction: The Permian ended with the "Great Dying" (approx. 251.9 million years ago), the largest extinction event in history.
- Causes likely involved massive volcanic eruptions in the Siberian Traps, releasing carbon dioxide and causing catastrophic global warming, ocean acidification, and oxygen depletion. This drastically altered from high-oxygen to low-oxygen levels, contributing to the mass extinction.
- Geography: Almost all landmasses gathered into the C-shaped supercontinent Pangea, surrounded by the global ocean, Panthalassa.


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