Cardipeltis
Cardipeltis is an extinct genus of heterostracan agnathan from marine strata of early Devonian of Utah, and Wyoming.[1][2] Species of Cardipeltis superficially resemble those of cyathaspids in having a flattened body and indistinct head covered by a large, broad, guitar pick or heart-shaped dorsal shield, and a long, scaly tail. Unlike cyathaspids, which all have a single ventral plate, however, the ventral shield of Cardipeltis is a mosaic composed of large scales.
| Cardipeltis Temporal range: Early Devonian  | |
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| C. richardsoni specimen on display at the Field Museum of Natural History. | |
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| Order: | Cardipeltiformes  | 
| Family: | Cardipeltidae  | 
| Genus: | Cardipeltis Branson & Mehl, 1931  | 
| Type species | |
| Cardipeltis wallacii | |
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Life restoration of C. bryanti
References
    
- Bryant, William L., and Rudolph Ruedemann. "The fish fauna of Beartooth Butte, Wyoming. Parts II and III." Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society (1934): 127-167.
 - Denison, Robert Howland. Cardipeltis: an early Devonian agnathan of the Order Heterostraci. Field Museum of Natural History, 1966.
 
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