Errivaspis

Extinct genus of jawless fishes From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Errivaspis is an extinct genus of pteraspid heterostracan agnathan vertebrate known from fossils at the Wayne Hereford Quarry, of Early Devonian England, and of Podolia, Early Devonian Ukraine. It was originally described by Dr. Errol Ivor White as one of five form-variants of Pteraspis rostrata, i.e., "Pteraspis rostrata var. waynesis.[1] In 1984, Alain Blieck moved var. waynesis into its own genus, Errivaspis, which he named after Dr. White.[1][2] Other later researchers would then mistakenly assume that Blieck synonymized the entire genus of Pteraspis into Errivaspis.

Phylum:Chordata
Infraphylum:Agnatha
Subclass:Heterostraci
Quick facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Errivaspis
Temporal range: Lochkovian
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Infraphylum: Agnatha
Class: Pteraspidomorpha
Subclass: Heterostraci
Order: Pteraspidiformes
Family: Pteraspididae
Genus: Errivaspis
Blieck, 1984
Type species
Pteraspis rostrata var. waynensis
White, 1935
Species
  • E. waynensis (White, 1935)
  • E. depressa (Stensio, 1958)
  • E. magnipinealis (Brotzen, 1933)
Synonyms
  • Plesiopteraspis depressa Stensio, 1958
  • Pteraspis magnipinealis Brotzen, 1933
  • Pteraspis major Zych, 1927
Close

Description

Errivaspis had large dorsal plates and ventral plates, the linking branchial plate, as well as a cornual plate at the side, an orbital plate around the eye. A rostral plate formed a pointed ‘snout’, several small plates around the mouth, and a dorsal spine pointing backwards. The posterior half of the body was covered with small scales. The caudal fin was fan-shaped.

References

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