Kiangsuaspis
Kiangsuaspis nankingensis is an extinct phyllocarid crustaceans from Late Silurian China. It was originally described in 1962 by Kiang P'an as an incomplete ventral plate of a cyathaspidid heterostracan agnathan with a unique pattern of raised, sculptured tubercles that fuse together into anastomosing ridges.[4] In 1984, Jiang P'an then reappraised it as a ceratiocaridid crustacean.[1][2][3]
Kiangsuaspis Temporal range: Late Silurian | |
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Comparison of K. nakingaspis and Xiushuiaspis | |
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Order: | Archaeostraca |
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Genus: | Kiangsuaspis P'an, 1962 |
Binomial name | |
Kiangsuaspis nankingensis P'an, 1962 | |
References
- Lucas, Spencer G. (2001-11-15). Chinese Fossil Vertebrates. Columbia University Press. p. 320(p. 34). ISBN 978-0231084826.
- Pan, Jiang. "The phylogenetic position of the Eugaleaspida in China."Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales. Vol. 107. 1984.
- Pan, J. "Notes on Silurian vertebrates of China." Bulletin of the Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences 15 (1986): 227-249.
- P'an, Kiang 1962. A new Silurian fish from Nanking, China. (Chinese with English summary). Acta Palaeont. Sinica, 10, no. 3, pp. 402-409, fig. 1, pi. 1.
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