“…We collected anatomical data from six wild adult Argentine black and white tegus (S. merianae) and six wild adult Virginia opossums (D. virginiana) (Tables S1 and S2). While varanid and iguanian lizards have traditionally been used as models of plesiomorphic amniote posture and locomotion (Jenkins & Goslow, 1983;Padian & Olsen, 1984;Ritter, 1996;Blob & Biewener, 1999;Blob, 2000;Farlow & Pianka, 2000;Clemente et al, 2011;Dick & Clemente, 2016), tegus were chosen here to represent a more shallowly-nested clade of terrestrial generalists (Sheffield et al, 2011;Simões et al, 2018) of growing importance as laboratory animals (Bennett & John-Alder, 1984;Montero et al, 2004;Toledo et al, 2008;Sheffield et al, 2011). In comparison, among extant mammals, didelphid opossums are a well-established plesiomorphic model for therian development, anatomy, and locomotion (Broom, 1899;Jenkins, 1971b;Hiiemae & Crompton, 1985;Klima, 1985;Parchman, Reilly & Biknevicius, 2003;Sánchez-Villagra & Maier, 2003;Gosnell et al, 2011;Hübler et al, 2013;Diogo et al, 2016;Bhullar et al, 2019).…”