M. celticus is the type species of the genus Maiocercus.[3]
Originally zoologist Reginald Innes Pocock compared M. celticus to Brachypyge, with later evidence showing that Brachypyge had "opisthosoma which were much longer than wide; with the pleural laminæ of the second and third pleura-bearing terga being inclined slightly backwards" (Brachypyge) with Maiocercus having the “opisthosoma much wider than long; the pleural laminæ of the first, second, third, and fourth sterna being inclined slightly forwards”.[4]
The original drawing which showed Maiocercus described a pitting on the underside of the slightly forwarded laminæ, with a non-uniform concavity on the outer margins of them. The concavity is most well-marked in the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth somites, with the opposite happening on the second, third and fourth somites.[5]
^Craven, D. J.; Dunlop, J. A. (2008). "The holotype of the trigonotarbid arachnid Maiocercus orbicularis Gill, 1911, a junior synonym of M. Celticus (Pocock, 1902)". Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society. 57: 61–62. doi:10.1144/pygs.57.1.61.
^Yorkshire Geological Society. Yorkshire Geological Society. 17 September 2009. Retrieved 12 August 2022 – via Google Books.