Anaschisma was erected by Branson (1905) from two metoposaurid skulls from the
Popo Agie Formation (
Carnian) of Wyoming. The generic name
Anaschisma ("ripped up") was not explained but would derive from
Ancient Greek ἀνασχίζω [anaskhizo] "rip up, rend", likely alluding to the fragmented state of the original fossils noted by Branson: "The skulls were in a hard matrix of arenaceous shale, and had been broken in many pieces." The type species,
A. browni, was coined for the skull UC 447, while a second nominal species,
A. brachygnatha, was erected for the skull UC 448. Moodie (1908) considered
A. brachygnatha a junior synonym of
A. browni, although Branson and Mehl (1929) retained the two species as distinct. Colbert and Imbrie (1956) synonymized
Anaschisma with the Newark Supergroup genus
Eupelor but retained it as a valid
Eupelor species endemic to the Popo Aggie Formation. Chowdhury (1965) synonymized
Anaschisma with
Metoposaurus and sunk all North American metoposaurids from the Chinle and Dockum into
browni. Hunt (1989) recovered
Anaschisma as an advanced or highly derived form. Some specimens attributed to
Anaschisma from the Redonda Formation were renamed
Apachesaurus by Hunt (1993).
Koskinonodon The genus
Koskinonodon was formerly named
Buettneria by Case in 1922, but in 2007, B.D. Mueller realized that the name
Buettneria had already been given to a bush cricket from the Republic of Congo by Karsch (1889), so he made the genus
Koskinonodon the earliest available unpreoccupied name for the temnospondyl. The species
B. bakeri which has long been assigned to the various synonyms of
Anaschisma, was moved to its own genus,
Buettnererpeton, in 2022. ==Description==