The genus
Angustidontus was named by American geologist Chalmer Lewis Cooper in 1936, together with the family "Angustidontidae". Cooper described the fossils, consisting of the serrated appendages, as fossil jaws of
actinopterygian fish. Since then, the appendages of
Angustidontus have been the subject of much debate on its classification. In the 1950s, it was suggested that the fossils instead represented
eurypterid chelicerae, possibly of something closely related to
Pterygotus. In 1960, Canadian geologists Murray John Copeland and Thomas Edward Bolton considered the fossils to instead represent
gill rakers of fish or be "claws similar to those on the second maxilliped of the
stomatopod Squilla"; furthermore, the appendage was noticed to have had some kind of "
ball and socket" joint type of
articulation. Though it was noted by several prominent researchers that
Angustidontus did not likely represent a eurypterid, it was treated as such, albeit with reservations, by most subsequent authors.
Angustidontus often occurs together with
Concavicaris, another Devonian crustacean.
Concavicaris fossils tend to lack the appendages, whilst
Angustidontus fossils often lack the
cephalothoracic shield because of its weak
sclerotisation. This caused some confusion, and some researchers have suggested that the two would represent different parts of the same animal. Expeditions to fossil localities in
Nevada where
Concavicaris and
Angustidontus were reported to have occurred together by Cooper in 1936 yielded more information on the appendages of
Concavicaris and allowed it to be determined that the appendages of
Angustidontus did not represent appendages of
Concavicaris. With hundreds of specimens being collected, proper research could be conducted on
Angustidontus for the first time with the discovery of the first complete specimens. The new specimens allowed researchers to determine that
Angustidontus was a
peracarid malacostracan crustacean, and that
Concavicaris simply represented a separate animal that was part of a larger Late Devonian
fauna including a large amount of different
invertebrates, such as
worms,
cephalopods,
bivalves,
brachipods and
sponges. The appendages which had caused confusion in the past were revealed to be the first thoracopods, but greatly elongated and adapted to be used in feeding. == Classification ==