Agassizodus

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Agassizodus

Agassizodus is an extinct genus of eugeneodont holocephalan from the Carboniferous. It belongs to the family Helicoprionidae, which is sometimes called Agassizodontidae. Like other members of its family, it possessed a symphyseal tooth whorl, which was likely present at the tip of the lower jaw and associated with lateral crushing toothplates. The type species, A. variabilis, was originally named Lophodus variabilis until the name "Lophodus" was determined to be preoccupied. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Agassizodus
rdf:langString Agassizodus
xsd:integer 55111357
xsd:integer 1080643072
rdf:langString St. John and Worthen 1875
rdf:langString Fossil tooth whorl
rdf:langString Agassizodus
rdf:langString Agassizodus variabilis
rdf:langString Newberry and Worthen, 1870
rdf:langString Agassizodus is an extinct genus of eugeneodont holocephalan from the Carboniferous. It belongs to the family Helicoprionidae, which is sometimes called Agassizodontidae. Like other members of its family, it possessed a symphyseal tooth whorl, which was likely present at the tip of the lower jaw and associated with lateral crushing toothplates. The type species, A. variabilis, was originally named Lophodus variabilis until the name "Lophodus" was determined to be preoccupied. A. variabilis was originally based on tooth fragments from the Pennsylvanian of Illinois, but the authors who named the genus (St. John and Worthen, 1875) also referred a massive jaw from Osage County, Kansas. The Osage jaw shared some similarities to tooth-whorls from the area, which were later described by Eastman (1902). Eastman concluded that the tooth whorls and jaw belonged to Campodus, so he renamed Agassizodus variabilis to Campodus variabilis. Other authors disagree, arguing that the Eastman specimens and the Osage jaw represent neither Agassizodus or Campodus, but rather an entirely new genus.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3193

data from the linked data cloud