'' The skull is long, deep and narrow, an adaptation for strong jaw muscles. The front teeth are large and dagger-like, whereas the teeth in the sides and rear of the jaw are much smaller (hence the name of the well-known genus
Dimetrodon – "two-measure tooth", although all members of the family have this attribute). Several large (~3 meters) and advanced members of this group (
Ctenospondylus,
Sphenacodon,
Secodontosaurus and
Dimetrodon) are distinguished by a tall sail along the back, made up of elongated
vertebral
neural spines, which in life must have been covered with skin and blood vessels, and presumably functioned as a
thermoregulatory device. However, possession of a sail does not appear to have been essential for these animals. For example, there is the case in which one genus (
Sphenacodon – fossils known from
New Mexico) lacks a sail, while a very similar and closely related genus (
Dimetrodon – fossils known from
Texas) has one. During the
Permian, these two regions were separated by a narrow sea-way, but it is not clear why one
geographically isolated group should evolve a sail, but the other group not. Due to the scarcity of evidence, there is ambiguity surrounding the appearance and evolution of non-mammalian synapsid integument. Skin impressions from a sphenacodontid described in 2025 revealed they were covered in scales rather than leathery skin or hair, with trace fossils from Early Permian of Germany indicating the underside of the body of and tail were covered in rectangular scales, while the limbs were covered in hexagonal scales. ==Classification==