“…Two unnamed possible crown caecilians are an unnamed form from the Wadi Milk Formation of Sudan (Cenomanian) and a terminal Cretaceous fossil from the Pajcha Pata in Bolivia. These provide hints that older caecilians, whose fossils appear to be so immensely rare, might be found down to the base of the Cretaceous at least, dated as 145.0 Ma ± 0.8 Myr (Gradstein et al, 2012, p. 838) (Carroll, 1964), and it falls within Eureptilia, on the stem to Diapsida (Laurin and Reisz, 1995;deBraga and Rieppel, 1997) -Lang et al, 2006;Grey and Fink, 2010;Utting et al, 2010) confirm that the Joggins Formation falls entirely within the Langsettian European time unit, equivalent to the Westphalian A, and roughly matching the Russian Cheremshanian, in the later part of the Bashkirian Stage. Earlier dates for these units were equivocal (Menning et al, 2000), but the Langsettian is given as 319-318 Ma by Gradstein et al (2012, p. 605), rather older than the 314.5-313.4 Ma ± 1.1 Myr given in GTS2004 (Davydov et al, 2004).…”