A redescription of the three longest-known species of the Acanthodian cheiracanthus from the middle devonian of Scotland

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Abstract

The cheiracanthid acanthodiforms were widespread during the Middle Devonian, often being the most abundant acanthodians in northern European vertebrate macroand microfaunal assemblages. Three species of cheiracanthids, Cheiracanthus murchisoni, C. grandispinus, and C. latus, have been known from the Middle Devonian (Eifelian–Givetian) of northern Scotland since the nineteeth century. Here we review the anatomy of these species and show that the main distinguishing features for the three species are the scale ornamentation, general body shape, and relative robustness of their scapulocoracoids and fin spines. They also show different stratigraphic and geographic distributions in the Orcadian Basin. All three species appear at the base of the Coccosteus cuspidatus + Pterichthyodes milleri placoderm biostratigraphic zone; C. latus disappears towards the upper limit of this zone, C. murchisoni extends into the base of the overlying Dickosteus threiplandi zone, and C. grandispinus reaches up to the middle of this zone. Some cheiracanthid taxa based on isolated scales from the Baltic countries, Belarus, and Russia are considered junior synonyms of the Scottish species. The new data we provide should prove helpful in further elucidating the taxonomic position of cheiracanthids.

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Burrow, C., Den Blaauwen, J., & Newman, M. (2020). A redescription of the three longest-known species of the Acanthodian cheiracanthus from the middle devonian of Scotland. Palaeontologia Electronica, 23(1), 1–43. https://doi.org/10.26879/1035

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