Microsaurs are adapted for fossorial ecologies, meaning that they dug and lived in burrows. Examples of these adaptations include an overhanging snout, a heavily ossified neurocranium, an elongate trunk, and shorter limbs. Though there are some microsaurs that managed to grow to larger sizes, the majority of them were often quite small (including
Euryodus). There are 13 teeth in the upper jaw, with the seventh being the largest. The lower jaw is described as "heavy". In order to give the
Euryodus a stronger jaw, the skull swells outward at the cheek. It also had a deep masseteric fossa, allowing a single enlarged tooth that the animal would be able to use to crush its food. The mandibles are often obscured, but have two rows of teeth on a massive dentary. This feature is unusual in microsaurs, being much more common in captorhinids. The presence of the second tooth row suggests that microsaurs are closely related to reptiles. The lower jaw passes from the snout to the back of the skull. The quadrate is located under the squamosal at the back of the skull. It is noted that sutures are hard to make out on
Euryodus skulls. The premaxilla possess small foramina.
Vertebra Euryodus vertebra have a single central ossification typical of
lepospondyls, though it does not possess ventral grooving. The
atlas flares anteriorly to articulate with the two condyles of the skull. The other vertebrae are otherwise similar, with single neural spines and a transverse process on the arch and on the centrum for the articulation of the ribs. The neural spines are relatively elongated ==See also==