“…Moreover, sesamoids are described in all the large vertebrate groups ( Abdala et al, 2019 ). They occur mainly associated with a large number of mobile joints, most commonly in the postcranium ( Romankowowa, 1961 ; Vickaryous & Olson, 2007 ; Ponssa, Goldberg & Abdala, 2010 ; Jerez, Mangione & Abdala, 2010 ; Chadwick et al, 2014 ; Regnault, Pitsillides & Hutchinson, 2014 ; Reyes-Amaya, Jerez & Flores, 2017 ; Samuels, Regnault & Hutchinson, 2017 ; Denyer, Regnault & Hutchinson, 2020 ), and in the skull of some taxa ( Hofling & Gasc, 1984 ; Tsai & Holliday, 2011 ; Montero et al, 2017 ). The number of cranial sesamoids is notoriously higher in Osteichthyes than in tetrapods ( Alexander, 1967 ; Adriaens & Verraes, 1998 ; Diogo, Oliveira & Chardon, 2001 ; Summers et al, 2003 ; Datovo & Bockmann, 2010 ), possibly due to the higher number of mobile joints in the fish skull ( Iordansky, 1989 ; Montero et al, 2017 ; Abdala et al, 2019 ).…”