Aciprion

{{Short description|Extinct genus of lizards}}

{{Automatic taxobox

| taxon = Aciprion

| fossil_range = {{fossilrange|Oligocene}}

| authority = Cope, 1873

| type_species = {{extinct}}Aciprion formosum

| type_species_authority = Cope, 1873

| synonyms_ref =

| synonyms =

  • A. majus Gilmore, 1928

}}

Aciprion is an extinct genus of lizard from the Middle Oligocene of Colorado, Wyoming and Nebraska. It was named in 1873 by American paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope for a jaw fragment from the Cedar Creek Member of the White River Formation in Colorado, as the binomial A. formosum. Multiple additional specimens have been referred to the genus, including the second species A. majus named by Gilmore in 1928 for a partial skull. However, the differences between A. formosum and A. majus relate to slight size differences, so A. majus is considered a junior synonym of A. formosum. Cope originally named Aciprion as a genus of teiid lizard, but Gilmore reclassified it as a member of Iguanidae.{{cite book|last=Estes|first=R.|year=1983|chapter=Part 10A. Sauria terrestria, Amphisbaenia|title=Handbuch der Palaoherpetologie|editor-last=Kuhn|editor-first=O.|publisher=Gustav Fischer Verlag|pages=210}}

References

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{{Extinct squamates|S.}}

{{Taxonbar|from=Q131625237}}

Category:Oligocene reptiles of North America

Category:Iguanidae

Category:Prehistoric lizard genera