“…Despite there being numerous, well-studied fossils in museum collections preserving the pharyngeal skeleton of Acanthodes its anatomy remains uncertain. Interpretations of the pharynx of Acanthodes remain based almost entirely (but see (Dearden & Giles, 2021)) on acid-prepared moulds, studied by making casts either physically (Miles, 1973a) or more recently digitally (Brazeau & de Winter, 2015). While many detailed studies of these casts of A. confusus have been carried out, the mouldic nature of the specimens have resulted in interpretational ambiguities, further exacerbated by the segmented ossification pattern of the visceral skeleton (Reis, 1896;Dean, 1907;Watson, 1937;Miles, 1964Miles, , 1965Miles, , 1968Miles, , 1973aNelson, 1968;Jarvik, 1977)).…”