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{{Italictitle}}[[File:Ichthyostega.jpg|thumb|308px|Restoration]]'''''Ichthyostega''''' was a primitive amphibian that lived in the Late Devonian Period of Greenland. |
{{Italictitle}}[[File:Ichthyostega.jpg|thumb|308px|Restoration]]'''''Ichthyostega''''' was a primitive amphibian that lived in the Late Devonian Period of Greenland. |
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==Description== |
==Description== |
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− | ''Ichthyostega'' measured about 1.5 meters |
+ | ''Ichthyostega'' measured about 1.5 meters in length. It had seven digits on each hind limb (the front limbs have never been found)<ref> Evolutionary developmental biology, by Brian Keith Hall, 1998, ISBN 0412785803, p. 262</ref>, and a finned tail. ''Ichthyostega'' was one of the first animals to use lungs as primary breathing organs and the adult's skeleton was well-adapted for both aquatic and terrestrial life. |
+ | ==Classification== |
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+ | ''Ichthyostega'' was closely related to ''Acanthostega'', but the former was more well adapted to life on land than the latter.<ref>"Acanthostega gunneri". Devonian Times. Retrieved 2013-11-04.</ref> There are four known species of ''Ichthyostega'', all from the same time and place: ''I. stensioei'', ''I. watsoni'', ''I. eigili'', and ''I. kochi''. |
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==Discovery== |
==Discovery== |
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− | All |
+ | All four species of ''Ichthyostega'' were described in 1932 from Greenland. Some additional specimens were collected from the area during the next twenty years. |
− | == |
+ | ==Paleobiology== |
''Ichthyostega'' was probably a carnivore. |
''Ichthyostega'' was probably a carnivore. |
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==References== |
==References== |
Latest revision as of 23:48, 22 January 2014
Ichthyostega was a primitive amphibian that lived in the Late Devonian Period of Greenland.
Description[]
Ichthyostega measured about 1.5 meters in length. It had seven digits on each hind limb (the front limbs have never been found)[1], and a finned tail. Ichthyostega was one of the first animals to use lungs as primary breathing organs and the adult's skeleton was well-adapted for both aquatic and terrestrial life.
Classification[]
Ichthyostega was closely related to Acanthostega, but the former was more well adapted to life on land than the latter.[2] There are four known species of Ichthyostega, all from the same time and place: I. stensioei, I. watsoni, I. eigili, and I. kochi.
Discovery[]
All four species of Ichthyostega were described in 1932 from Greenland. Some additional specimens were collected from the area during the next twenty years.
Paleobiology[]
Ichthyostega was probably a carnivore.
References[]
- ↑ Evolutionary developmental biology, by Brian Keith Hall, 1998, ISBN 0412785803, p. 262
- ↑ "Acanthostega gunneri". Devonian Times. Retrieved 2013-11-04.