Squamate research • A study on the biogeography of squamates throughout their evolutionary history, providing evidence of a localized
Pangaean origin (Africa, Australia, Eurasia and
Sunda) of the squamate
crown group in the Jurassic followed by strong regionalization to Eurasia for subsequent Jurassic lineages, is published by Wilenzik, Barger & Pyron (2024). • New lizard assemblage, including fossil material of a
pleurodontan
iguanian, a
teiioid and a possible
scincoid, is described from the Upper Cretaceous (Campanian-Maastrichtian)
Allen Formation (
Argentina) by Garberoglio
et al. (2024). • Revision of the fossil material of
Paleocene lizards from the Walbeck fissure filling (
Saxony-Anhalt,
Germany) is published by Čerňanský & Vasilyan (2024), who interpret
Camptognathosaurus parisiensis as a
junior synonym of
Glyptosaurus walbeckensis, resulting in a new combination
Camptognathosaurus walbeckensis, tentatively assign
C. walbeckensis to the family
Lacertidae, and interpret fossils of
Parasauromalus paleocenicus as belonging to an indeterminate lacertid. • Čerňanský (2024) describes probable fossil material of the
European green lizard from the Węże I locality in
Poland, providing evidence of large geographic distribution of green lizards in Europe during the Pliocene. • Fossil material of the oldest European member of the genus
Eremias reported to date is described from the Pleistocene strata from the Taurida cave (Crimea) by Syromyatnikova & Tarasova (2024). • An
iguanian skull from the Paleogene
White River Formation (Wyoming, United States), tentatively assigned to the species
Aciprion formosum, is interpreted as the oldest and first definitive
stem member of
Crotaphytidae by Scarpetta (2024); the author also interprets
Polrussia mongoliensis as possible member of the
crown group of
Pleurodonta,
Magnuviator ovimonsensis as a possible stem pleurodontan and
Afairiguana avius as a possible
anole. •
De Queiroz et al. (2024) describe a probable juvenile anole specimen from the
Dominican amber, and identify it as a
trunk anole likely related to extant
Anolis distichus. • An anole tail, possibly belonging to a specimen of
Anolis electrum, is described from the Miocene
Mexican amber by De Queiroz
et al. (2024). • A study on frontals and maxillae of extant
agamids from
Australia and
Papua New Guinea, and on the utility of these bones for identification of agamid taxa in the fossil record, is published by Ramm
et al. (2024), who report that the studied bones diagnostic at the generic level and might provide information on the ecology of fossil agamids, but also that the studies relying on these elements would likely underestimate agamid species diversity. • Čerňanský
et al. (2024) describe
glyptosaurid,
palaeovaranid and
varanid fossils from the earliest Eocene strata from the Dormaal site (
Belgium) and transfer ?
Placosaurus ragei to the glyptosaurid genus
Gaultia, representing the first record of this genus outside North America. • Revision of the fossil material and a study on the affinities of
Pseudopus pannonicus is published by Loréal, Georgalis & Čerňanský (2024), who interpret the majority of large
anguids from the
Neogene of Europe as
junior synonyms of
P. pannonicus. • Donato
et al. (2024) identify skull remains of a Middle Pleistocene monitor lizard from Naracoorte's Fossil Chamber (Victoria Fossil Cave, Australia) as fossil material of the
lace monitor. • Garzon
et al. (2024) describe an incomplete maxilla from the
Turonian to
Coniacian Middle Napo Formation of the Napo Group, representing the first finding of a mosasaurid from the Upper Cretaceous strata from
Ecuador. • Allemand
et al. (2024) present reconstructions of brain
endocasts of three specimens of
Tethysaurus nopcsai, providing evidence of different endocranial organizations in
Tethysaurus,
Platecarpus and
Clidastes, and find no evidence of closer endocranial resemblance of
Tethysaurus to monitor lizards than other
toxicoferans. • Páramo-Fonseca
et al. (2024) describe well-preserved
chondrocranial elements of a mosasaur specimen from the Coniacian Galembo Formation (
Colombia), indicating that chondrocranium of mosasaurs was more reduced than in most lizards, but not as severely as in snakes and amphisbaenians, and that its reduction might have been related to the modification of limbs by adaptation to aquatic life. • The oldest fossil material of
Platecarpus from Europe reported to date, as well as fossil material of
Tylosaurus sp, is described from the
Santonian localities in the Sougraigne area (Aude Department,
France) by Plasse
et al. (2024). • Grigoriev, Zverkov & Nikiforov (2024) describe mosasaur remains from the
Campanian strata from the Izhberda locality, including the first records of members of the subfamilies
Tylosaurinae (including
Taniwhasaurus, expanding known geographical range of the genus),
Mosasaurinae and
Plioplatecarpinae from the Upper Cretaceous strata from the
Orenburg Oblast (
Russia). • Rempert, Martens & Vinkeles Melchers (2024) describe new fossil material of mosasaurs from the Upper Cretaceous strata in Mississippi (United States), providing evidence of the presence of
Mosasaurus hoffmannii during the Maastrichtian and of
cf. Platecarpus, an unnamed species of
Plioplatecarpus from the
Demopolis Chalk and probably of
Tylosaurus sp. during the Campanian. • A study on a skull of a specimen of
Plioplatecarpus from the
Campanian Bearpaw Shale (
Alberta,
Canada) preserved with a
scleral ring is published by Holmes (2024), who interprets
Plioplatecarpus as having a stereoscopic vision and capable of tracking quickly moving objects in light-poor conditions. • Sharpe, Powers & Caldwell (2024) consider
Xenodens calminechari to be
nomen dubium, and interpret its type material as subjected to a forgery. • López-Rueda
et al. (2024) describe new mosasaur material from the Upper Cretaceous Labor-Tierna and Plaeners formations (
Colombia), including the first record of a member of the genus
Globidens from northern South America reported to date. • Rempert, Martens & Vinkeles Melchers (2024) report the discovery of new mosasaur material from the Maastrichtian
Peedee Formation (
North Carolina,
United States), including fossils of members of species associated with the northern and southern margin of the Mediterranean
Tethys (
Prognathodon cf.
solvayi and
Mosasaurus cf.
beaugei), extending their known geographical range. • Aniny
et al. (2024) describe a trunk vertebra of
Palaeophis cf. africanus from the Eocene deposits of the El Breij Depression (
Western Sahara), expanding known geographical range of the species. • Natarajan
et al. (2024) describe new fossil material of
Pterosphenus schucherti from the Eocene (Bartonian) Harudi Formation (
India), and interpret the species
P. biswasi and
P. schweinfurthi as
junior synonyms of
P. schucherti. • Garberoglio, Gómez & Caldwell (2024) describe fossil material of a large-bodied (estimated to be around 8 meters in total length) snake distinct from
Titanoboa from the Paleocene
Cerrejón Formation (
Colombia) interpreted by the authors as an undetermined
palaeophiine. • Flores
et al. (2024) describe remains of a snake belonging to the genus
Lampropeltis from the probable Pleistocene strata from the McFaddin Beach (
Texas,
United States), providing the first evidence of presence of members of this genus on the Texan coast in the Pleistocene. • Villa
et al. (2024) describe vertebrae of indeterminate cobras from middle–late Miocene localities in the Vallès-Penedès Basin (Catalonia, Spain), providing evidence of presence of cobras in the Iberian Peninsula before the
Messinian salinity crisis. • The first known snake assemblage from early
Clarendonian in North America is reported from the Penny Creek Local Fauna (
Ash Hollow Formation; Nebraska, United States) by Jacisin & Lawing (2024), who interpret the studied fossils as indicative of a woodland-prairie environment with a permanent stream or river as a local water source. • ElShafie (2024) presents novel methods which can be used to determine body size from isolated lizard bones and applies these methods to a sample of lizard bones from the Paleogene of North America. • Ledesma
et al. (2024) revise fossil material of late Pleistocene and Holocene lizards from Hall's Cave (
Texas, United States), adding five new taxa to the known diversity of the cave fauna, and establish a procedure for making well-supported identifications for North American lizard fossils. • Richter
et al. (2024) report Late Pleistocene (~15.4 ± 1.14 ka and ~13.2 ± 1.14 ka respectively) fossils identifiable as
Phrynosoma Cf. P. douglasii from the
Coyote Canyon Mammoth Site, Benton County, Washington. These are the first confirmed
Phrynosoma "horned toad" fossils identified from the Pacific Northwest. ==Ichthyosauromorphs==