“…Among skinks, the closed Meckelian canal in the dentary can be observed in several lineages (Greer, 1970, 1974; Estes et al, 1988; Shea, 1999; Caputo, 2004; Hutchinson and Scanlon, 2009; Bolet et al, 2015; Čerňanský et al, 2020b; Čerňanský and Syromyatnikova, 2021): Mabuyinae, Egerniinae, Eugongylinae, Sphenomorphinae, Lygosominae, but also in Acontinae, whereas Scincinae and Ateuchosaurus have a fully open canal. The preserved morphology of the Tapar dentaries most resembles that of members of the clade Mabuyinae in the combination of the following features (Čerňanský et al, 2020b; Čerňanský and Syromyatnikova, 2021): (1) the closed Meckelian canal; (2) narrow ventral section under the dental portion relative to high alveolar crest; (3) close tooth spacing, including the level of the crowns; and (5) tooth crown morphology. One member of the mabuyines, Eutropis , occurs in the Territory of India (Mausfeld et al, 2002), but note that one taxon from Indochina, Toenayar novemcarinata (Anderson, 1871), has been separated from Eutropis and placed in the monotypic genus Toenayar (Karin et al, 2016).…”