Gecatogomphius is known from the holotypePIN 1156/1, a three-dimensionally preserved nearly complete lower jaw found on the bank of the Vyatka River near the town of Gorki in the Kirov Oblast, and from PIN 4310/1 a single maxillary tooth plate from Berezovye Polyanki in Tatarstan.[2] The preserved part of the jawbone fragment has a length of 80 millimeters and is posteriorly expanded to form a very broad shelf that bears five rows of bulbous teeth.[1]
Gecatogomphius is part of the biostratigraphic Ocher Assemblage which is characteristic for sediments of the East European Platform with an uppermost Lower Permian (Upper Kungurian) and lower Middle Permian (Roadian) age.[3]
Etymology
Gecatogomphius was first named by B. P. Vjushkov and Pjotr K. Chudinov in 1957 and the type species is Gecatogomphius kavejevi. The generic name is derived from hecato, Greek for "hundred", and gomphos, Greek for "peg", "nail" or "wedge", referring to the large number of teeth in the jaw. The specific namekavejevi is in honour of the finder of the type specimen, the Soviet geologist Mazit S. Kaveev.[1]
References
^ abcB. P. Vjushkov; Pjotr K. Chudinov (1957). "Открытие Kaпторинид в верхней Перми CCCP [Discovery of a captorhinid in the Upper Permian of the USSR]". Доклады Академии Наук СССР. 112 (3): 523–526.
^Michail F. Ivachnenko (1990). "Раннепермские элементы фаунистических комплексов тетрапод Восточной Европы [Upper Permian elements of tetrapod faunal assemblages of Eastern Europe]". Палеонтологический Журнал. 1990 (2): 102–111.
^Valerij K. Golubev (2005). "Permian Tetrapod Stratigraphy"(PDF). New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin. 30: 95–99.