Pleurosternon bullockii is a turtle from the Early Cretaceous of Europe known from
numerous postcranial remains. Only one skull has so far been referred to the species.
Pleurosternon bullockii belongs to a group of turtles called pleurosternids, which
is thought to include several poorly known taxa from the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous
of Europe and North America. Pleurosternids and baenids, a group of North American
turtles that lived from the Late Cretaceous to the Eocene, define a Glade called Paracryptodira.
Additionally, Paracryptodira likely includes compsemydids, and, potentially, helochelydrids.
Character support for Paracryptodira is relatively weak, and many global phylogenetic
studies fail to support paracryptodiran monophyly altogether. Proposed paracryptodiran
synapomorphies are largely cranial, despite the poor characterization of pleurosternid
cranial material. In addition to their questionable monophyly, the global position
of paracryptodires is debated. Early studies suggest crown-turtle affinities, but
most phylogenies find them as stem-turtles, irrespective of their monophyly. Here,
we document the cranial osteology of Pleurosternon bullockii with the use of three-dimensional
models derived from segmenting high-resolution X-ray micro-computed tomography (CT)
scans. Pleurosternon bullockii has a primitive basipterygoid region of the skull,
but a cryptodire-like acustico-jugular region. A surprising number of similarities
with pleurodires exist, particularly in the laterally expanded external process of
the pterygoid and in the posterior orbital wall. Our observations constitute an important
step toward a phylogenetic re-evaluation of Paracryptodira.