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Pterichthyodes
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== Description == {{Multiple image | image1 = Pterichthyodes oblongus (cropped).jpg | image2 = Pterichthyodes oblongus fossil and plaster model (cropped).jpg | direction = vertical | align = left | caption1 = From Lethen, Nairnshire, Scotland. | caption2 = Next to a 1953 plaster model. }} As with all other antiarchs, ''Pterichthyodes'' had heavily armored heads and forebodies, while their scaly tails were unarmored. Specimen length ranges from {{convert|8|in|cm}} to {{convert|12|in|cm}}.<ref name="dk" /> As placoderms, they were members of the [[Gnathostome|earliest known vertebrates to possess]] [[jaw]]s, though they had grinding plates rather than teeth. The generic name of ''Pterichthyodes'' refers directly to their odd wing-like appendages ("pterichthys" being a compound [[crassis]] word from Ancient [[Greek language|Greek]] for "wing-fish"), which correspond to and were derived from the pectoral fins seen in modern fish and other non-antiarch placoderms. Fossils of ''Pterichtyodes'' showing eyes positioned on the direct of the head and a "ventrally flattened [[Trunk (anatomy)|trunk]] shield" suggest that it was a "bottom dweller", living at the bottom of lakes, where it might have crawled using its pectoral appendages.<ref name="dk" /> It has also been theorized that ''Pterichthyodes'' and other antiarchs used these appendages to bury itself.<ref name="vp">{{cite book | chapter=Early Palaeozoic Fishes | chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SyJO3vpCk8AC&pg=PA58 | title=Vertebrate Palaeontology | publisher=[[Wiley-Blackwell|Blackwell Publishing]] | author=Benton, Michael J. | authorlink=Michael Benton | year=2005 | chapter-format=Google eBook | edition=third | location=Malden, Massachusetts | pages=58, 63 | isbn=0-632-05637-1}}</ref> ''Pterichthyodes'' would have fed by browsing shallower areas of the lake bed for decaying detritus.<ref name="vp" /> {{Multiple image | image1 = Pterichthys.jpg | caption1 = 1876 | image2 = F John Series 1 Pterichthys card 30.jpg | caption2 = 1902, with an outdated terrestrial depiction. | header = Artistic Reconstructions | image3 = Pterichthyodes milleri.jpg | caption3 = 2009 | align = center | total_width = 660 }} {{clear left}}
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