The Dolese Limestone Quarry near Richards Spur, Oklahoma includes an elaborate system of caves which have been infilled with early Permian fossil rich sediments.In operation for more than a century, the quarry yielded vast numbers of disarticulated skeletal elements of the most diverse assemblage of fully terrestrial tetrapods from the Paleozoic.Excavations carried out in Volleyball - Clothing - Shorts this century are distinct in producing large numbers of articulated and semiarticulated skeletons, including numerous new taxa.
Dolese is therefore unique among early Permian localities in being home to a diverse assemblage of small parareptiles, including two species of Delorhynchus.Here we describe a new species of acleistorhinid, characterized by the presence of multiple tooth rows on the dentary, that can be identified with confidence as a third new species of Delorhynchus.The multiple tooth rowed condition is deemed not to be a pathological condition, and appears to have Male Enhancement formed in the same manner as in the captorhinid eureptile Captorhinus aguti through uneven growth of the tooth-bearing element.