- Dunkleosteus - Wikipedia
Dunkleosteus Dunkleosteus is an extinct genus of large arthrodire ("jointed-neck") fish that existed during the Late Devonian period, about 382–358 million years ago It was a pelagic fish inhabiting open waters, and one of the first vertebrate apex predators of any ecosystem [1]
- Dunkleosteus: The Monster With The Devastating Bite - Ocean Info
Dunkleosteus Terrelli, commonly known as Dunkleosteus, is a huge arthropod shark-like species that lived in the Late Devonian period, roughly 380–358 million years ago
- Dunkleosteus: Giant Armored Placoderm Apex Devonian Predator
Explore Dunkleosteus, an extinct Devonian placoderm and one of the most powerful jawed fish ever known, featuring armored plates, world-wide fossils, and fierce predatory adaptations
- Dunkleosteus Animal Facts - Dunkleosteus - A-Z Animals
Dunkleosteus is an extinct genus of giant armored predatory fishes (placoderms) that lived in the Late Devonian (~382–358 million years ago) It is best known for its massive bony jaw plates forming a powerful biting apparatus and for being among the top marine predators of its time
- Dunkleosteus - Prehistoric Wildlife
In modern popular culture, Dunkleosteus is by far the best known and most often represented of the early placoderm carnivores However Dunkleosteus actually sat within the Dinichthys genus for a long time as the species Dinichthys terrelli
- Dunkleosteus: The Armor-Plated Fish with a Bone-Crushing Bite
Dunkleosteus belonged to a group of prehistoric armored fishes known as placoderms, animals whose heads and upper bodies were encased in thick bony plates But Dunkleosteus was something even more impressive within that group
- Dunkleosteus – Facts, Physical Traits, Behavior, and Fossil Insights
Explore Dunkleosteus, the prehistoric armored fish Learn about its physical traits, habitat, diet, behavior, reproduction, and its role in ancient ecosystems
- Dunkleosteus Reconstruction - palaeo-electronica. org
Dunkleosteus terrelli, as well as most eubrachythoracid arthrodires, appear to have had incomplete lateral lines that did not extend the entire length of its body
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