Meiolaniidae was an extinct family of large, possibly herbivorous turtles with heavily armored heads and tails. They are best known from the last surviving genus, Meiolania, which lived in the rainforests of Australia from the Oligocene until the Pleistocene, and relict populations that lived on Lord Howe Island and New Caledonia until 2000 years ago. The family was once thought to have originated in Australia sometime in the Oligocene, when the earliest Meiolania first appeared. However, due to the discovery of South American meiolaniids, including Crossochelys in Eocene Argentina, and the problematic Niolamia argentina (problematic, as researchers are unsure whether it dates from the Cretaceous, or Eocene), it is now believed that the meiolaniids appeared sometime prior to the breakup of Gondwana during the Cretaceous.
Genus and Species
Niolamia argentina
see Niolamia
Ninjemys oweni
see Ninjemys
Meiolania
see Meiolania
Gallery
- Anapsid Reptiles
- Prehistoric reptiles of South America
- Herbivores
- Reptiles
- Cretaceous animals
- Taxonomy
- Families
- Turtles
- Extinct animals of Australia
- Prehistoric animals of australia
- Oligocene animals
- Miocene animals
- Pliocene animals
- Pleistocene animals
- Pleistocene Reptiles
- Taxa named by Richard Lydekker
- Cretaceous reptiles
- Miocene Reptiles
- Pliocene Reptiles
- Eocene animals
- Eocene reptiles
- Neogene animals
- Neogene reptiles
- Cenozoic animals
- Cenozoic Reptiles
- Middle Cretaceous Reptiles
- Late Cretaceous
- Mesozoic reptiles
- Mesozoic animals
- Survivors of Mesozoic period
- Survivors of Cretaceous period