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Seven species have been referred to this genus over the years, which have since been reassigned to other genera: * Palaeoscincus africanus, named by Robert Broom in 1910/1912,[2] a partial jaw from the Tithonian-Valanginian-age Upper Jurassic-Lower Cretaceous Kirkwood Formation of South Africa, now known as the stegosaurid Paranthodon;[3] * Palaeoscincus asper, "the rough one", a dubious tooth taxon from the late Campanian-age Upper Cretaceous Dinosaur Park Formation of Alberta, Canada, named by Lawrence Morris Lambe in 1902,[4] based on a single tooth, specimen NMC 1349 now referred to Euoplocephalus;[5] * Palaeoscincus costatus, "the ribbed one", the type species named by Leidy in 1856, known from a single tooth, specimen ANSP 9263 found by Ferdinand Vandiveer Hayden near Fort

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  • Palaeoscincus
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  • Seven species have been referred to this genus over the years, which have since been reassigned to other genera: * Palaeoscincus africanus, named by Robert Broom in 1910/1912,[2] a partial jaw from the Tithonian-Valanginian-age Upper Jurassic-Lower Cretaceous Kirkwood Formation of South Africa, now known as the stegosaurid Paranthodon;[3] * Palaeoscincus asper, "the rough one", a dubious tooth taxon from the late Campanian-age Upper Cretaceous Dinosaur Park Formation of Alberta, Canada, named by Lawrence Morris Lambe in 1902,[4] based on a single tooth, specimen NMC 1349 now referred to Euoplocephalus;[5] * Palaeoscincus costatus, "the ribbed one", the type species named by Leidy in 1856, known from a single tooth, specimen ANSP 9263 found by Ferdinand Vandiveer Hayden near Fort
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  • Gold
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Name
  • Palaeoscincus
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abstract
  • Seven species have been referred to this genus over the years, which have since been reassigned to other genera: * Palaeoscincus africanus, named by Robert Broom in 1910/1912,[2] a partial jaw from the Tithonian-Valanginian-age Upper Jurassic-Lower Cretaceous Kirkwood Formation of South Africa, now known as the stegosaurid Paranthodon;[3] * Palaeoscincus asper, "the rough one", a dubious tooth taxon from the late Campanian-age Upper Cretaceous Dinosaur Park Formation of Alberta, Canada, named by Lawrence Morris Lambe in 1902,[4] based on a single tooth, specimen NMC 1349 now referred to Euoplocephalus;[5] * Palaeoscincus costatus, "the ribbed one", the type species named by Leidy in 1856, known from a single tooth, specimen ANSP 9263 found by Ferdinand Vandiveer Hayden near Fort Benton. It was the first ankylosaurian species to be named based on American material;[5] It is now considered an ankylosaurian of unknown affinities. * Palaeoscincus latus, "the wide one" named by Othniel Charles Marsh in 1892, from the late Maastrichtian-age Upper Cretaceous Lance Formation of Wyoming,[6] also based on a single tooth, specimen YPM 4810 found in Niobrara County, Wyoming, now believed to have come from a pachycephalosaurid;[5] * "P. magoder", a nomen nudum name from a faunal list by Karl ("Charles") L. Henning,[5][7] the result of mistaking the German words mag oder for a specific name; * Palaeoscincus rugosidens, "rough tooth" named by Charles Whitney Gilmore in 1930, the best-known species, a skull and partial skeleton from the late Campanian-age Two Medicine Formation of Montana,[8] now known as Edmontonia rugosidens,[5] or a separate genus Chassternbergia. It was this species that was portrayed in most restorations of the genus. * Palaeoscincus tutus, a renaming of Euoplocephalus tutus by Edwin Hennig in 1915.[9] Today, the type species P. costatus and thereby the genus is considered to be an indeterminate ankylosaurian,[10][11] perhaps an indeterminate nodosaurid.
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