Buchanosteus is an extinct genus of arthrodire placoderm. Its fossils have been found in Early Devonian-aged marine strata throughout Asia and Australia. It contains the following species:

  • Buchanosteus confertituberculatus, the type species, is known from several specimens found from the Emsian-aged Taemas-Weejasper Reef in what is now New South Wales, Australia. It coexisted sympatrically with other buchanosteid genera there.
  • Buchanosteus guangxianensis is known primarily from a well-preserved, albeit incomplete endocranium from Pragian-aged deposits near Guangxi, China. It is compared to another buchanosteid, the "giant" Exutaspis from the late Emsian Wuding Formation in Yunnan.
  • Buchanosteus nuricus is known from one or two specimens from Emsian strata in the Qaranghandy Region in Kazakhstan, and named for the Nura River. Is very similar in anatomy to B. confertituberculatus
Buchanosteus
Temporal range: Pragian–Emsian
Buchanosteus confertituberculatus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Placodermi
Order: Arthrodira
Suborder: Brachythoraci
Family: Buchanosteidae
Genus: Buchanosteus
Stensiö, 1945
Type species
Phlyctaenaspis australis var. confertituberculata
Chapman, 1916
Species
  • Buchanosteus confertituberculatus (Chapman, 1916)
  • Buchanosteus guangxiensis Wang, 2005
  • Buchanosteus nuricus Mark-Kurik, 2004

References

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