Genus of extinct fish
Heightingtonaspis is an extinct genus of primitive arthrodire placoderm fish from the Devonian period in Great Britain , and currently contains three species.
The type species Heightingtonaspis anglica was described by Ramsay Traquair in 1890, and was initially named Phlyctaenius anglicus . The holotype specimen NHMUK PAL PV P 29417 was first discovered on the surface at the Old Red Sandstone supergroup , Shropshire , England and the fossils were radiocarbon dated in situ to 416 million years old.[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] it has also been found in the Senni Beds of Wales .[ 3]
Heightingtonaspis clarkei was described by Charles R. Eastman in 1907, and was originally named Kujdanowiaspis clarkei . It was later revised and reassigned to the genus Heightingtonaspis by Denison in 1978.[ 1] [ 4]
Heightingtonaspis willsi was described by White in 1961, and was originally named Kujdanowiaspis willsi , but was later reassigned to the genus Heightingtonaspis , which was created in 1969 by White.[ 4] H. willsi was discovered in the same location as H. anglica , in Shropshire , England .[ 1] [ 2] [ 3]
Heightingtonaspis is one of the more basal members of the order Arthrodira , as shown in the cladogram below:[ 5]
Actinolepidoidei
Phlyctaeniina
References
^ a b c Robert Denison. (1978). Placodermi. In H.-P. Schultze (ed.), Handbook of Palaeoichthyology 2:1-128
^ a b Dineley D. L., Metcalfe S. J. (1999). Chapter 4. Early Devonian fossil fishes sites of the Welsh Borders, Fossil Fishes of Great Britain, 2731
^ a b c White, E.I. (1969). The deepest vertebrate fossil and other arctolepid fishes. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 1(3): 293-310
^ a b Dupret, Vincent (2010). "Revision of the genus Kujdanowiaspis Stensiö, 1942 (Placodermi, Arthrodira, "Actinolepida") from the Lower Devonian of Podolia (Ukraine)" . Geodiversitas . 32 (1): 5– 63. doi :10.5252/g2010n1a1 . S2CID 129505974 .
^ Dupret, V.; Zhu, M. I. N.; Wang, J. N. Q. (2009). "The morphology of Yujiangolepis liujingensis (Placodermi, Arthrodira) from the Pragian of Guangxi (south China) and its phylogenetic significance" (PDF) . Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society . 157 : 70. doi :10.1111/j.1096-3642.2009.00519.x .
Heightingtonaspis Heightingtonaspis anglica