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Cionodon
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Cionodon (meaning 'column tooth') is a dubious of J. R. Horner, D. B. Weishampel, and C. A. Forster. 2004. . In D. B. Weishampel, H. Osmolska, and P. Dodson (eds.), (2nd edition). University of California Press, Berkeley 438-463 from the . The , C. arctatus, was found in the of Lodge Pole Creek, and was formally described by Edward Drinker Cope in 1874 based on the AMNH 3951, collected in 1873.E. D. Cope. 1874. Report on the stratigraphy and vertebrate paleontology of northern Colorado. Bulletin of the United States Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories 1(1):9-22 It is a because it is based on very fragmentary remains. Two other species have since been described: Cionodon kysylkumensis (, 1931), based on the holotype CCMGE 1/3760 (a set of ) from ,A. N. Riabinin. 1931. Ostatki dinozavrov iz verkhnego mela nizov'ev r. Amu-Dar'i On. Zapiski Rossiyskogo Mineralogicheskogo Obshchestva 60(1):114-118 and Cionodon stenopsis (Cope, 1875), discovered in rocks from the Judith River Formation of Alberta, in 1874. E. D. Cope. 1875. On the transition beds of the Saskatchewan district. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 27:2-3 Although both are probably hadrosaurs, they are known only from fragmentary remains and Cionodon kysylkumensis has since been reclassified as Bactrosaurus kysylkumensis.


History of naming
In 1874, American paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope identified that sediments in northern that had previously been considered were actually from the , confirmed by a vertebrate assemblage collected by . This strata was recognized as equivalent to the Great Lignite exposed along the , rather than the . Among the vertebrate fossils to support this designation, Cope noted the new taxa "", "Polyonax mortuarius", and Cinodon arctatus, though he only described the latter. Cinodon was described as an herbivorous , distinguished primarily by its teeth but also known from other parts of the skeleton. Cope more thoroughly described Cionodon the next year in 1875, noting that a had incorrectly written the name as Cinodon rather than his indented Cionodon. The material of Cionodon was found across two localities few miles apart, and though and limb bones were also referred, Cope identified a partial with teeth as the of the taxon. The Cionodon comes from a combination of the κίων ( kion) and ὀδών ( -odon) meaning "column/pillar tooth", and the is from the arctatus, "compressed". In 1875 Cope also named a second species of Cionodon, C. stenopsis, based on remains including teeth from the Milk River valley in .

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