Skull Specimens reveal that
Petrolacosaurus had a slightly elongated skull with two temporal fenestrae. The upper
temporal fenestra is located
posteriorly to an enlarged orbit. This is a distinctly diapsid character. The largest teeth in the jaw were at the front of the snout, erupting from the
premaxilla bone. There were also a few larger-than average teeth further back on the
maxilla, which were probably homologous with
caniform teeth retained from the common ancestor between true
sauropsid reptiles and
synapsids (mammal ancestors). On the
dentary, there are marginal teeth, displaying a primitive type of shallow implantation. The palatal arrangement bears close resemblance to
Youngoides.
Axial skeleton There are seven elongated
cervical vertebrae, 2
sacrals, and 60
caudal vertebrae. The number and placement of the vertebrae show that
Petrolacosaurus was a rather long-necked reptile with a shorter torso. The number and spool-like shape of the vertebrae, in addition to the poses that the reptiles died in, show that they were also very flexible creatures. The vertebral centra were amphicoelous (concave from the front and behind) and had large ventrolateral depressions. A similar depression can be seen on the massive
neural arches, running from the
prezygapophyses to the
postzygapophysis. These depressions allowed the vertebral column to be lighter while still retaining a sturdy build.
Pectoral girdle The pectoral girdle in
Petrolacosaurus is light in comparison to the massive girdles found in taxa such as
pelycosaurs. Petrolacosaurus specimens had a
clavicle with an expanded ventral blade, yet shorter than that of
Captorhinus or
pelycosaurs. Also, there is a large
cleithrum with a broad, rounded end.
Limbs The limbs of
Petrolacosaurus were long and slender in comparison to other primitive diapsids such as
Araeoscelis. The
radius and
ulna in
Petrolacosaurus are of relatively equal length. Unlike these two bones, the
fibula is significantly shorter than the
tibia, because the
tibia has distal articulation with the astragalus. This length difference is further pronounced because the astragalus has a long-neck and buttressed, oblique platform providing an inflexible, concave articulation with the tibia. This articulation creates a virtually immobile joint between the two.
Petrolacosaurus has a phalangeal formula for the manus of 2-3-4-5-3. For the pes, the formula is 2-3-4-5-4. The digits increase in length from digit I-digit V. Metatarsal IV is 3.5 times as long as metatarsal I. Many lines of post-Paleozoic reptiles have a reduction in digit IV in the manus and pes, indicating that
Petrolacosaurus is more primitive than those reptiles. == Classification ==