Prehistoric Life
Prehistoric
Secrets in Stone
The Earliest Fossils
The Silurian Reef
Trilobites
Fish
The Coal Forests
Sea Reptiles
Flying Reptiles
The Teeming Seas
Hunting Dinosaurs
Biggest Dinosaurs
Two-Footed Plant Eaters
Plated and Armoured Dinosaurs
Horned Dinosaurs
The Mammal Age Dawns
Grassland Mammals
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Early Reptiles and Amphibians
Gradually, the great swampy coal forests of the Carboniferous period died away and were replaced by vast areas of desert in Permian times. The numbers of amphibians, which needed watery conditions in which to lay their eggs, dwindled. Some became big, dry land animals, but for the most part, the reptiles took over. Reptile eggs were encased in a waterproof shell and could be laid on land.

(A) PLANT EATERS
Some early reptiles became plant-eaters, like Edaphosaurus. Their temperature regulation system, using their great fins, later developed into a mammal's warm-bloodedness.

(B) LAND AMPHIBIANS
Heavy land-living amphibians like Eryops, which had strong legs and jaws, lived at the desert edges.

(C) RULING REPTILES
At the beginning of the Permian period, the reptiles that were to develop into the dinosaurs were small and lizardlike, such as Areoscelis.

(D) FIN BACKS
Dimetrodon also had a large fin on its back. The large surface of the fin enabled it to warm up and cool down quickly.

(E) WATER AMPHIBIANS
Water-based amphibians, like Diplocaulus with its odd-shaped head, still lived in oases.
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Prehistoric Life
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Early Reptiles and Amphibians