Campodus is an extinct genus of eugeneodont holocephalans from the Carboniferous.[1][2] Likely one of the earliest and most basal caseodontoids, it can be characterized by its broad, ridge-ornamented crushing teeth made of various types of dentine. The type species, C. agassizianus, was originally described in 1844 based on a small number of teeth from the Namurian of Belgium.[3]
Campodus Temporal range: Carboniferous,
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Life restoration | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Chondrichthyes |
Subclass: | Holocephali |
Order: | †Eugeneodontida |
Clade: | †Caseodontoidea |
Genus: | †Campodus Koninck, 1844 |
Species[1] | |
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Additional fossils have been referred to the genus. These include Belgian specimens referred by Lohest (1884), fossils from Missouri referred by Zangerl (1981), and symphyseal tooth-whorls from Nebraska and Kansas referred by Eastman (1902).[4] The tooth whorls were given their own species, C. variabilis. They shared some similarity to a massive "Agassizodus" jaw apparatus found in Osage, Kansas and described by St. John & Worthen (1875). This has led some authors to the conclusion that Agassizodus and Campodus were synonyms.[5] However, others note that clearly identifiable Campodus teeth have not been found in the same areas from which Agassizodus was originally described.[4] Ginter (2018) concluded that Eastman's "C. variabilis" and St. John & Worthen (1875)'s "Agassizodus" belonged to neither Campodus nor Agassizodus, and instead represented a new unnamed genus. Ginter additionally referred a specimen from Derbyshire, England to Campodus agassizianus.[3]
References
edit- ^ a b "†Campodus de Koninck 1844". Paleobiology Database. Fossilworks. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
- ^ Hay, O.P. (1902). Bibliography and Catalogue of the Fossil Vertebrata of North America. Bulletin of the United States Geological Survey. Vol. 179.
- ^ a b Ginter, Michał (2018). "The dentition of a eugeneodontiform shark from the Lower Pennsylvanian of Derbyshire, UK" (PDF). Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 63 (4): 725–735. doi:10.4202/app.00533.2018.
- ^ a b Zangerl, R. (1981). Chondrichthyes I – Paleozoic Elasmobranchii. Handbook of Paleoichthyology. Stuttgart: Gustav Fischer Verlag. pp. i–iii, 1–115.
- ^ Eaton, Theodore H. (1 October 1962). "Teeth of Edestid Sharks". University of Kansas Publications, Museum of Natural History. 12 (8): 347–362.