of
Slavoia darevskii, a fossil squamate Squamates are a
monophyletic sister group to the
rhynchocephalians, members of the order Rhynchocephalia. The only surviving member of the Rhynchocephalia is the
tuatara. Squamata and Rhynchocephalia form the superorder
Lepidosauria, which is the sister group to the
Archosauria, the
clade that contains crocodiles and birds, and their extinct relatives.
Fossils of rhynchocephalians first appear in the
Early Triassic, meaning that the lineage leading to squamates must have also existed at the time. A study in 2018 found that
Megachirella, an extinct genus of
lepidosaurs that lived about 240 million years ago during the
Middle Triassic, was a
stem-squamate, making it the oldest known squamate. The
phylogenetic analysis was conducted by performing high-resolution
microfocus X-ray computed tomography (micro-CT) scans on the fossil specimen of
Megachirella to gather detailed data about its
anatomy. These data were then compared with a phylogenetic dataset combining the morphological and
molecular data of 129 extant and extinct reptilian
taxa. The comparison revealed
Megachirella had certain features that are unique to squamates. The study also found that geckos are the earliest crown group squamates, not iguanians. However, a 2021 study found the genus to be a lepidosaur of uncertain position, in a
polytomy with Squamata and
Rhynchocephalia. In 2022, the extinct genus
Cryptovaranoides was described from the
Late Triassic (
Rhaetian age) of
England as a highly derived squamate belonging to the group
Anguimorpha, which contains many extant lineages such as
monitor lizards,
beaded lizards and
anguids. The presence of an essentially modern
crown group squamate so far back in time was unexpected, as their diversification was previously thought to have occurred during the Jurassic and Cretaceous. In 2023, Brownstein and colleagues study found that
Cryptovaranoides most likely represents an
archosauromorph with no apparent squamate affinities; the original describers maintained their original conclusion in 2024 that this taxon represents a squamate, while Caldwell and colleagues contested their results in 2025. The oldest unambiguous fossils of Squamata date to the
Bathonian age of the Middle Jurassic of the Northern Hemisphere, Scientists believe
crown group squamates probably originated in the
Early Jurassic based on the fossil record, Squamate morphological and ecological diversity substantially increased over the course of the
Cretaceous, Squamates suffered a mass extinction at the
Cretaceous–Paleogene (K–Pg) boundary, which wiped out polyglyphanodontians, mosasaurs, and many other distinct lineages. The relationships of squamates are debatable. Although many of the groups originally recognized on the basis of morphology are still accepted, understanding of their relationships to each other has changed radically as a result of studying their
genomes. Iguanians were long thought to be the earliest crown group squamates based on
morphological data, Iguanians are now united with snakes and
anguimorphs in a clade called
Toxicofera. Genetic data also suggest that the various limbless groups – snakes,
amphisbaenians, and
dibamids – are unrelated, and instead arose independently from lizards. == Reproduction ==