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  2. Pterygotus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pterygotus

    Pterygotus is an extinct genus of giant predatory eurypterid, a group of extinct aquatic arthropods.Fossils of Pterygotus have been discovered in deposits ranging in age from Middle Silurian to Late Devonian, and have been referred to several different species.

  3. Pterygotidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pterygotidae

    Jaekelopterus, previously designated as a species of Pterygotus, was separated into a distinct genus in 1964 based on the supposed different segmentation of the genital appendage. These supposed differences would later turn out to be false, but briefly prompted Jaekelopterus to be classified within a family of its own, the "Jaekelopteridae".

  4. Pterygotioidea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pterygotioidea

    The fossils referred to this species, recovered from Lesmahagow, Scotland, were soon realized to be distinct from other species of Pterygotus (such as the type species P. anglicus) and that same year geologist David Page erected a new genus to contain the species. The new genus, Slimonia, could be differentiated from other known species of ...

  5. Timeline of eurypterid research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_eurypterid...

    The earliest eurypterid reconstruction; a figure of Eurypterus remipes by James E. De Kay (1825).. This timeline of eurypterid research is a chronologically ordered list of important fossil discoveries, controversies of interpretation, and taxonomic revisions of eurypterids, a group of extinct aquatic arthropods closely related to modern arachnids and horseshoe crabs that lived during the ...

  6. Eurypterid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurypterid

    A fourth genus, Slimonia, based on fossil remains previously assigned to a new species of Pterygotus, was referred to the Eurypteridae in 1856 by David Page. [87] Evolutionary tree of eurypterids as imagined by John Mason Clarke and Rudolf Ruedemann in 1912.

  7. Acutiramus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acutiramus

    The earliest species of Acutiramus to be named was A. macropthalmus (as a species of Pterygotus, Pterygotus macrophthalmus) in 1859. The type specimen, the carapace of a young individual, was discovered in waterlime deposits of Upper Silurian age in Litchfield, New York.

  8. List of eurypterid genera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_eurypterid_genera

    Eurypterus, the most commonly found eurypterid fossil and the first eurypterid genus to be described. This list of eurypterid genera is a comprehensive listing of all genera that have ever been included in the order Eurypterida, excluding purely vernacular terms.

  9. Hughmilleria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hughmilleria

    Restoration of H. socialis. Hughmilleria is the most basal (primitive) known member of the Pterygotioidea. [1] It was a small-sized eurypterid, with the largest specimen measuring 20 cm (8 in), being surpassed by other members of its superfamily, such as Slimonia acuminata, which measured 100 cm (39 in) in length, and Pterygotus grandidentatus, which could reach 1.75 meters (5 ft 8 in). [2]