The clade Hesperornithes was originally named as a subclass of
Aves by Furbringer in 1888. However, it was generally ignored in the scientific literature in favor of the order-level name
Hesperornithiformes, coined one year later. In 2004, Clarke became the first to define the hesperornithean group in terms of
phylogenetics. Clarke defined Hesperornithes as all species closer to
Hesperornis regalis than to modern birds, and regarded Hesperornithiformes as a junior synonym, though she did not define the latter name. Clarke also defined the more inclusive group
Hesperornithidae as all hesperornitheans closer to
Hesperornis than to
Baptornis. Hesperornitheans were originally combined with
Ichthyornis in the
paraphyletic group "
Odontornithes" by
Othniel Charles Marsh, in 1873. In 1875, they were separated as
Odontolcae. The group was often considered to be related to loons and grebes, or to the
Paleognathae (based on perceived similarities in the
bony palate). These similarities, however, as the more recently determined fact that the
osteons of their bones – at least in
Hesperornis – were arranged in a pattern similar to that in
Neognathae, are today considered to be due to
convergent evolution.
Relationships In 2015, a species-level phylogenetic analysis found the following relationships among hesperornitheans. }} }} }} }} }} }} }} ==References==