Fadenia

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Fadenia
Temporal range: CarboniferousEarly Triassic, 320–247.2 Ma
Fadenia crenulata
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Chondrichthyes
Order: Eugeneodontiformes
Family: Caseodontidae
Genus: Fadenia
Nielsen, 1932
Type species
Fadenia crenulata
Nielsen, 1932
Other species
  • F. gigas Eaton, 1962
  • F. makrothi? Geinitz, 1861
  • F. monscana Trautschold, 1874
  • F. uroclasmato Mutter & Neuman, 2008

Fadenia is an extinct genus of eugeneodontid holocephalian chondrichthyan from the Carboniferous Period of Missouri (United States), the Permian period of Greenland, and the Early Triassic epoch of British Columbia, Canada (Sulphur Mountain Formation).[1][2]

Early Triassic and Middle Triassic marine predators: 2. Fadenia[3]

The first fossils of Fadenia were discovered and described in the periodical Meddelelser om Grønland in 1932 by the Danish vertebrate palaeontologist Eigil Nielsen after studying the Upper Permian beds of Cape Stosch, in the fjord of Godthab Gulf in King Christian X Land, East Greenland. Nielsen had joined at the beginning of the Three-year Expedition to East Greenland led by Danish geologist and explorer Lauge Koch. The manager of the expedition was the botanist Gunnar Seidenfaden, after whose surname the genus was named.[4][5]

Classification

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Further reading

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