- Callovosaurus. The type species, C.
leedsi, was
first described by
Richard Lydekker in 1889 as
Camptosaurus leedsi, the
specific name
honouring collector...
- was
referred to as the
species Pelorosaurus leedsi by
Lydekker in 1895, and as the
taxon Cetiosaurus leedsi by
Arthur Smith Woodward in the 1905, which...
-
Oxford Clay
Formation of England. The type species, C.
leedsi, was
originally named "Steneosaurus"
leedsi by
Andrews in 1909 on the
basis of
three specimens...
- The
bannerfin shiner (Cyprinella
leedsi) is a
species of fish in the
family Cyprinidae. It is
endemic to the
United States,
where it
occurs on the Atlantic...
- from the
Oxford Clay of England. The
current type and only
species is S.
leedsi, and the
holotype is a
single partial left mandible. The
genus and species...
- much, if not all, its life out at sea. It was a
small reptile, with G.
leedsi measuring 2.25–3.11 m (7.4–10.2 ft) long and G.
acutus measuring 3.77 m...
-
Loricatosaurus (meaning "armored lizard") is a
Stegosaurid genus from Callovian-age (Middle Jur****ic)
rocks of
England and France.
Loricatosaurus is known...
-
Muraenosaurus (from the
Latin "Muraena"
meaning "eel" and "Sauros"
meaning lizard) is an
extinct genus of
cryptoclidid plesiosaur reptile from the Oxford...
-
Location Stratigraphic position Material Notes Images Callovosaurus C.
leedsi Cambridgeshire Lower "Femur." An
iguanodontian dryosaur.
Lexovisaurus L...
- of the
species Cetiosaurus leedsi. This was
changed in 1927, when
Friedrich von
Huene found NHMUK PV R3078 and the C.
leedsi type
specimen to be too different...