Material collected in 1969 by the CNRS-MNHN expedition to Spitsbergen includes a new species of Gigantaspis, G. minima, which is the smallest known species of this genus. The revision of Gigantaspis leads to the inclusion of Zascinaspis laticephala Blieck and Goujet in this genus. The phylogenetic analysis presented herein suggests that Gigantaspis is close to Zascinaspis, as suggested by Blieck. Moreover, it is also close to generalized representatives of the Protaspididae. Their shared character states allow the definition of a possible ancestral morphotype for the Protaspididae.
The Pteraspidiformes are an order of armoured agnathans of Silurian and Devonian age composed of five families: the Anchipteraspididae, Protopteraspididae, Pteraspididae, Protaspididae and Psammosteidae. Relationships within the order are poorly known and although past attempts have been made to represent the state of knowledge in this area none have attempted a rigorous computer-based analysis. Here we present the results of the cladistic analysis on a matrix comprising 25(+1) taxa and 59 characters using W INCLADA . The first analysis was run without any representative of the Psammosteidae and supports the presence of five groups within the order although one, the 'Protopteraspididae', is paraphyletic and a second, the Gigantaspididae, is newly recognized. In a second analysis the addition of the psammosteid Drepanaspis gemuendenensis results in a better resolved tree in which the basal family, the Anchipteraspididae, are clearly monophyletic and in which the Psammosteidae, as represented by Drepanaspis , is the next less inclusive. This is contrary to the previous view that the psammosteids were an advanced clade within the Pteraspidiformes.
The origin of tetrapods is one of the key events in vertebrate history. The oldest tetrapod body fossils are Late Devonian (Frasnian-Famennian) in age, most of them consisting of rare isolated bone elements. Here we describe tetrapod remains from two Famennian localities from Belgium: Strud, in the Province of Namur, and Becco, in the Province of Li ege. The newly collected material consists of an isolated complete postorbital, fragments of two maxillae, and one putative partial cleithrum, all from Strud, and an almost complete maxilla from Becco. The two incomplete maxillae and cleithrum from Strud, together with the lower jaw previously recorded from this site, closely resemble the genus Ichthyostega, initially described from East Greenland.The postorbital from Strud and the maxilla from Becco do not resemble the genus Ichthyostega. They show several derived anatomical characters allowing their tentative assignment to a whatcheeriid-grade group. The new tetrapod records show that there are at least two tetrapod taxa in Belgium and almost certainly two different tetrapod taxa at Strud. This locality joins the group of Devonian tetrapodbearing localities yielding more than one tetrapod taxon, confirming that environments favourable to early tetrapod life were often colonized by several tetrapod taxa.
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