taxonID	type	format	identifier	references	title	description	created	creator	contributor	publisher	audience	source	license	rightsHolder	datasetID
8930E442307FFF95EEA2FC07E2E9553C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7390595/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7390595	Figure 4. Solitudo sicula sp. nov. from the latest Pleistocene of Zubbio di Cozzo San Pietro Cave, Sicily, Italy. Holotype ZCSP US.0-Q2, right femur, in dorsal (A), anterior (B), ventral (C), posterior (D), proximal (E) and distal (F) view. The right femur of the extant Te. marginata (the largest Mediterranean extant tortoise) is included for comparison at the same scale. Scale bar = 10 cm.	Figure 4. Solitudo sicula sp. nov. from the latest Pleistocene of Zubbio di Cozzo San Pietro Cave, Sicily, Italy. Holotype ZCSP US.0-Q2, right femur, in dorsal (A), anterior (B), ventral (C), posterior (D), proximal (E) and distal (F) view. The right femur of the extant Te. marginata (the largest Mediterranean extant tortoise) is included for comparison at the same scale. Scale bar = 10 cm.	2022-07-02	Valenti, Pietro;Vlachos, Evangelos;Kehlmaier, Christian;Fritz, Uwe;Georgalis, Georgios L.;Luján, Àngel Hernández;Miccichè, Roberto;Sineo, Luca;Delfino, Massimo		Zenodo	biologists	Valenti, Pietro;Vlachos, Evangelos;Kehlmaier, Christian;Fritz, Uwe;Georgalis, Georgios L.;Luján, Àngel Hernández;Miccichè, Roberto;Sineo, Luca;Delfino, Massimo			
8930E442307FFF95EEA2FC07E2E9553C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7390597/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7390597	Figure 5. Solitudo sicula sp. nov. from the latest Pleistocene of Zubbio di Cozzo San Pietro Cave, Sicily, Italy. Right ischium ZCSP US.0-Q1 in dorsomedial (A) and ventrolateral (B) views. Left pubis ZCSP US.2-Q4 in ventromedial (C) and dorsolateral (D) views. Ungual phalanx ZCSP US.0-Q3 in dorsal (E), ventral (F) and lateral (G) views. Scale bar = 10 cm.	Figure 5. Solitudo sicula sp. nov. from the latest Pleistocene of Zubbio di Cozzo San Pietro Cave, Sicily, Italy. Right ischium ZCSP US.0-Q1 in dorsomedial (A) and ventrolateral (B) views. Left pubis ZCSP US.2-Q4 in ventromedial (C) and dorsolateral (D) views. Ungual phalanx ZCSP US.0-Q3 in dorsal (E), ventral (F) and lateral (G) views. Scale bar = 10 cm.	2022-07-02	Valenti, Pietro;Vlachos, Evangelos;Kehlmaier, Christian;Fritz, Uwe;Georgalis, Georgios L.;Luján, Àngel Hernández;Miccichè, Roberto;Sineo, Luca;Delfino, Massimo		Zenodo	biologists	Valenti, Pietro;Vlachos, Evangelos;Kehlmaier, Christian;Fritz, Uwe;Georgalis, Georgios L.;Luján, Àngel Hernández;Miccichè, Roberto;Sineo, Luca;Delfino, Massimo			
8930E442307FFF95EEA2FC07E2E9553C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/7390593/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7390593	Figure 3. Consensus tree of the seven most parsimonious trees of 5469 steps, resulting from the cladistic analysis of extant and extinct tortoises (22 taxa scored for 177 morphological characters). The femora of the circum-Mediterranean tortoises represent three morphotypes that are independent from body size. They belong mostly to two different morphotypes (I, II) that show a phylogenetic signal within Testudininae, i.e. Testudinini vs. Geochelonini, whereas insular tortoises from the Mediterranean show a different morphotype (III). The simplified drawings are not to scale. Abbreviations: major tr.: major trochanter; minor tr.: minor trochanter.	Figure 3. Consensus tree of the seven most parsimonious trees of 5469 steps, resulting from the cladistic analysis of extant and extinct tortoises (22 taxa scored for 177 morphological characters). The femora of the circum-Mediterranean tortoises represent three morphotypes that are independent from body size. They belong mostly to two different morphotypes (I, II) that show a phylogenetic signal within Testudininae, i.e. Testudinini vs. Geochelonini, whereas insular tortoises from the Mediterranean show a different morphotype (III). The simplified drawings are not to scale. Abbreviations: major tr.: major trochanter; minor tr.: minor trochanter.	2022-07-02	Valenti, Pietro;Vlachos, Evangelos;Kehlmaier, Christian;Fritz, Uwe;Georgalis, Georgios L.;Luján, Àngel Hernández;Miccichè, Roberto;Sineo, Luca;Delfino, Massimo		Zenodo	biologists	Valenti, Pietro;Vlachos, Evangelos;Kehlmaier, Christian;Fritz, Uwe;Georgalis, Georgios L.;Luján, Àngel Hernández;Miccichè, Roberto;Sineo, Luca;Delfino, Massimo			
