Cacops Temporal range: Early Permian,
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Skeleton of Cacops aspidephorus in the Field Museum | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Order: | †Temnospondyli |
Family: | †Dissorophidae |
Clade: | †Eucacopinae |
Genus: | †Cacops Williston, 1910[1] |
Species | |
Cacops ("ugly look" for its strange appearance), is a genus of dissorophid temnospondyls from the Kungurian stage of the early Permian of the United States.[2][3] Cacops is one of the few olsoniforms (dissorophids and the larger trematopids) whose ontogeny is known.[4][5] Cacops fossils were almost exclusively known from the Cacops Bone Bed of the Lower Permian Arroyo Formation of Texas for much of the 20th century.[1] New material collected from the Dolese Brothers Quarry, near Richards Spur, Oklahoma in the past few decades has been recovered, painting a clearer picture of what the animal looked and acted like.[2][3][6]
Williston, S. W. (1910)
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Fröbisch, N. B., Brar, A., & Reisz, R. R. (2015)
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).