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One key adaptation is the fusing of bones into single ossifications, such as thepygostyle.
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They also had a more derivedpygostyle, with a ploughshare-shaped end.
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They interpreted the anatomies of the two as very similar and sharing key autapomorphies of thepygostyle.
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Finally, itspygostyleis longer than the tarsometatarsus.
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The pygosylians fall into two distinct groups with regard to thepygostyle.
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Thepygostylewas long, high and narrow.
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The otherpygostyletype is plowshare-shaped.
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Tinamous have no truepygostyle, their caudal vertebrae remain unfused, as in ratites.
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