In 1982,
Kenneth Carpenter named a number of theropod teeth from the late Maastrichtian aged
Lance Formation of
Wyoming as the
type species Pectinodon bakkeri. The generic name is derived from the
Latin word
pecten, meaning "comb", and the Greek word ὀδών,
odon, meaning "tooth", in reference to the comb-like serrations on the rear edge of the teeth. The
specific name honors famed paleontologist
Robert Thomas Bakker. This is today often considered a
nomen dubium. While historically considered synonymous with
Troodon or more specifically the species
Troodon formosus,
Philip Currie and colleagues (1990) noted that the
P. bakkeri fossils from the
Hell Creek Formation and Lance Formation might belong to different species. In 1991, George Olshevsky assigned the Lance formation fossils to the species
Troodon bakkeri. In 2011, Zanno and colleagues reviewed the convoluted history of troodontid classification in Late Cretaceous North America. They followed Longrich (2008) in treating
Pectinodon bakkeri as a valid genus and noted that it is likely the numerous Late Cretaceous specimens currently assigned to
Troodon formosus almost certainly represent numerous new species, but that a more thorough review of the specimens is required. In 2013, Currie and
Derek Larson concluded that
Pectinodon bakkeri was valid and its teeth could be found both in the Lance Formation and the coeval Hell Creek Formation. Some teeth from the older
Campanian Dinosaur Park Formation could not be statistically differentiated from them, likely due to an insufficiently large sample, and were referred to
cf. Pectinodon. == Description ==