Eastmanosteus

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Eastmanosteus
Temporal range: Middle Devonian–Late Devonian
E. calliaspis skull on display at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City
Artist's reconstruction of E. calliaspis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Placodermi
Order: Arthrodira
Suborder: Brachythoraci
Family: Dunkleosteidae
Genus: Eastmanosteus
Obruchev, 1964
Type species
Dinichthys pustulosus
(Eastman, 1897)
Species
  • E. calliaspis Dennis-Bryan, 1987
  • E. licharevi (Obruchev, 1956)
  • E. lundarensis Hanke, Stewart and Lammers, 1996
  • E. magnificus (Hussakof & Bryant, 1918)
  • E. yunnanensis (Wang, 1982)

Eastmanosteus ("Eastman's bone") is a fossil

nuchal plate and a more zig-zagging course of the sutures of the skull roof.[1]

Species of Eastmanosteus had powerful jaws with sharp cutting edges and were likely active predators. Fossils have been found in many parts of the world in marine sediments dating from the Middle to Late Devonian. They were medium-to-large fish, with specimens E. pustulosus and E. licharevi approaching a total length of 3 metres. Complete exoskeletons with soft-tissue traces of E. calliaspis from Australia make this one of the best known dunkleosteids.

Phylogeny

Eastmanosteus and its relative

phylogeny of Eastmanosteus can be shown in the cladogram below:[2]

Dunkleosteoidea

Westralichthys uwagedensis

Protitanichthys rockportensis

Panxiosteidae

Panxiosteus ocullus

Janiosteus timanicus

Plourdosteus canadensis

Dunkleosteidae

Eastmanosteus calliaspis

Xiangshuiosteus wui

Eastmanosteus pustulosus

Kiangyousteus yohii

Golshanichthys asiatica

Dunkleosteus amblyodoratus

Dunkleosteus terrelli

Dunkleosteus raveri

Alternatively, the subsequent 2016 Zhu et al. study using a larger morphological dataset recovered Panxiosteidae well outside of Dunkleosteoidea, leaving the status of Dunkleosteidae as a clade grouping separate from Dunkleosteoidea in doubt, as shown in the cladogram below:[3]

Dunkleosteoidea

Eastmanosteus calliaspis

Eastmanosteus pustulosus

Kiangyousteus yohii

Golshanichthys asiatica

Westralichthys uwagedensis

Dunkleosteus raveri

Dunkleosteus terrelli

Dunkleosteus amblyodoratus

Heterostiidae

Heterosteus ingens

Yinosteus major

Species

Eastmanosteus calliaspis Dennis-Bryan, 1987

From the

gnathostome soft tissue.[5] The largest known skull is 272mm in length suggesting a total body length of roughly 1.5m. It was one of the largest fish in the Gogo assemblage.[6] A reexamination of the family Dunkleosteidae posits the Late Emsian Xiangshuiosteus as E. calliaspis' sister taxon, and further implicates that E. calliaspis differs enough from other members of this genus to merit placement with its own genus.[2]

E. licharevi (Obrucheva, 1956)

A poorly known species from Russia, originally described from an isolated nuchal plate from the Frasnian of Timman with additional material from the Famennian of Lipetsk.[4]

E. lundarensis Hanke, Stewart and Lammers, 1996

A medium-sized species from the Eifelian of south-central Manitoba, Canada. One of the earliest and most completely known members of the genus.[7]

E. magnificus (Hussakof & Bryant, 1918)

Based on a single almost complete head shield from the Late Devonian of New York State, US. Has previously been assigned to Dinichthys and Dunkleosteus.[4]

E. pustulosus (Eastman, 1897)

This is the type species and was originally placed in the genus Dinichthys. It was a large and widely distributed form, with fossil material from the Middle-Late Devonian of the USA (Wisconsin, Iowa, Michigan, New York State) and the Frasnian of Poland.[4]

IG plate (lower jaw) of E. pustulosus from the type locality in Milwaukee County, Wisconsin.

E. yunnanensis (Wang, 1982)

Originally assigned to Dunkleosteus. From the Middle Devonian of Yunnan Province, China.[1]

Eastmanosteus species 1 Janvier

An undescribed species based on relatively well preserved material from the Frasnian of Kerman, East Iran.[4]

Other species

Many other species have been included within this genus based on material from Russia, Morocco, and the United States. Most of these are either indeterminate dinichthyids or are now placed in different genera.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b "Vertebrata Palasiatica" (PDF). ivpp.cas.cn. December 2018. Retrieved 31 March 2023.
  2. ^ .
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  6. ^ Long, J.A. (2007) Swimming in Stone: The Amazing Gogo Fossils of the Kimberley, Fremantle Arts Centre Press
  7. JSTOR 4523760
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