conodont
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek κῶνος (kônos, “cone”) + -odont.
Noun
conodont (plural conodonts)
- Any of several extinct fish-like chordates having cone-like teeth.
- 2012, Winand Brinkmann, Kenneth De Baets, editors, Paleontological Museum of the University of Zürich: Exhibition Guide, Paleontological Institute and Museum of the University of Zürich, →ISBN, page 30:
- Remains of conodonts, which may be invertebrates or primitive vertebrates, have also become known from the tuffites and bituminous slates of Monte San Giorgio, which became famous for their fish and marine reptile remains.
- 2022, Thomas Halliday, Otherlands, Penguin, published 2023, page 245:
- The beginning and the end of the Permian are both defined by the first appearances of particular conodont species.
- A microfossil tooth of such an animal.
Translations
extinct fish-like chordate
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