Amblypterus (from Greek: ἀμβλύςamblys, 'blunt' and Greek: πτερόνpteron 'wing' or 'fin')[1] is an extinctgenus of freshwater ray-finned fish that lived during the Gzhelian (upper Carboniferous) and Cisuralian (lower Permian) epoch in what is now Europe (Czech Republic, France, Germany, Switzerland) and possibly India and Argentina.[2][3] Potential indeterminate records stretch as far back as the early Carboniferous.[4]
Taxonomy
This genus displays close similarities to Paramblypterus, to the extent that both may be synonymous, although presently they are considered distinct. The type specimen of A. latus is lost.[5]
^Westoll, Thomas S. (1937). "LVII.—On a remarkable fish from the lower Permian of Autun, France". Annals and Magazine of Natural History. Series 10. 19 (114): 553–577. doi:10.1080/00222933708655302.
Further reading
Evolution: The Grand Experiment by Carl Werner and Debbie Werner