Biology:Acanthodus

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Short description: Extinct genus of jawless fishes


Acanthodus
Temporal range: Late Cambrian–Early Ordovician
Conodonts00.jpg
W: Acanthodus uncinatus Furnish; lateral view of non-serrate suberectiform element, from upper part of middle Gasconade Dolomites at Phillips Quarry, X 50, USNM 498518.
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
†Protopanderodontida
Family:
†Acanthodontidae
Genus:
Acanthodus

Furnish, 1938[1]
Species
  • Acanthodus costatus
  • Acanthodus humachensis
  • Acanthodus raqueli
  • Acanthodus uncinatus

Acanthodus is an extinct genus of conodonts.

Acanthodus humachensis and A. raqueli are from then Late Cambrian (late Furongian) or early Ordovician (Tremadocian) of the Santa Rosita Formation in Argentina.[2]

References

  1. Conodonts from the Prairie du Chien (Lower Ordovician) beds of the upper Mississippi valley. WM Furnish, Journal of Paleontology, volume 12, No. 4, July 1938, pages 318-340 (Stable URL)
  2. New conodont species and biostratigraphy of the Santa Rosita Formation (upper Furongian–Tremadocian) in the Tilcara Range, Cordillera Oriental of Jujuy, Argentina. Fernando J. Zeballo and Guillermo L. Albanesi, Geological Journal, 2013, volume 48, issue 2–3, pages 170–193, doi:10.1002/gj.2425

External links

Wikidata ☰ Q24885266 entry