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COMPSODON
(comp-so-don)
Named By: Hoepen in 1934
Time Period: Upper Permian
Location: South Africa - Dicynodon Assemblage Zone
Size: Unavailable
Diet: Herbivore
Fossil(s): Partial remains
Classification: | Chordata | Synapsida | Therapsida | Dicynodontia | Emydopoidea |
About

Compsodon is an extinct genus of dicynodont belonging to the anomodont group Emydopoidea. Fossils have been found in South Africa and Zambia.

Compsodon helmoedi was originally described by Egbert Cornelis Nicolaas van Hoepen in 1934 on the basis of a single specimen from late Permian deposits in the Karoo Basin of South Africa. Two additional specimens from South African museum collections and three new specimens from the Luangwa Basin of Zambia have elucidated new aspects of the morphology of this species and indicate that it occurred in upper Cistecephalus and lower Daptocephalus assemblage zones. Compsodon can be diagnosed by features of its palate, but also the presence of maxillary postcanines and parietals fused and narrowly exposed between broad postorbitals on the dorsal surface of skull.

Read more about Compsodon at Wikipedia
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