Asiamericana
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Asiamericana |
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Extinct (fossil)
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||||
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Asiamericana (AY-zha-MER-i-KAHN-a - (Greek: Asia meaning "Asia" and Latin American meaning "America") was named to recognise the occurrence of similar fossil teeth in Central Asia and North America. These regions once formed a connected land mass, during the Cretaceous period and were referred to as Asiamerica. Asiamericana has been tentatively classified with the Spinosauridae
The teeth were discovered by L. A. Nessov in 1995. The findings were based on three teeth found in the central Kyzylkum desert, Uzbekistan, comparable to other teeth found in Kazakhstan and North America, which have been illustrated but not formally described.
[edit] Classification issues
Nessov himself has cautioned that these unusual teeth may belong to saurodont fish rather than to dinosaurs.