Ophiocantabria Temporal range: | |
---|---|
Holotype specimen of O. elegans | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Echinodermata |
Class: | Ophiuroidea |
Family: | † Encrinasteridae |
Subfamily: | † Encrinasterinae |
Genus: | † Ophiocantabria Blake, Zamora & García-Alcalde, 2015 |
Species: | †O. elegans |
Binomial name | |
†Ophiocantabria elegans Blake, Zamora & García-Alcalde, 2015 | |
Ophiocantabria is an extinct genus of brittle stars that lived during the early Devonian period in what is now the Furada Formation of Spain. It contains a single species, O. elegans, which was first described in 2015 from a complete specimen.
The only known specimen of Ophiocantabria was collected in the village of El Fresno, located in the Cantabrian Mountains of northern Spain. The deposits from which the fossil originates represents a poorly-exposed section of the Furada Formation covered partly by vegetation, which dates to the early Lochkovian stage of the Devonian period. In 2015, paleontologists Daniel Blake, Samuel Zamora and Jenaro Garcia-Alcalde described a new genus and species based on this specimen, which they named Ophiocantabria elegans. The generic name references the Cantabrian Mountains where the fossil was discovered, while the specific name is Latin for "elegant". The only known specimen of this species has been designated as the holotype, and is housed in the geology museum of the University of Oviedo where it is cataloged as DPO 33484. [1]
Pterygotus is a genus of giant predatory eurypterid, a group of extinct aquatic arthropods. Fossils of Pterygotus have been discovered in deposits ranging in age from Middle Silurian to Late Devonian, and have been referred to several different species. Fossils have been recovered from four continents; Australia, Europe, North America and South America, which indicates that Pterygotus might have had a nearly cosmopolitan (worldwide) distribution. The type species, P. anglicus, was described by Swiss naturalist Louis Agassiz in 1839, who gave it the name Pterygotus, meaning "winged one". Agassiz mistakenly believed the remains were of a giant fish; he would only realize the mistake five years later in 1844.
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