Belongs within: Conodonta.
The Proconodontida are a lineage of conodonts characterised by thin-walled, smooth-surfaced elements that form a relatively simple apparatus. The earliest representative of the proconodontidans is the Late Cambrian Proconodontus, which possessed an apparently unimembrate apparatus of relatively large, deeply excavated, smooth-surfaced, hyaline coniform elements (Sweet 1988).
<==Proconodontida [Cavidonti] SD01
|--Proconodontidae SD01
| |--Eoconodontus Miller 1980 S88
| | `--E. notchpeakensis LM05
| `--Proconodontus Miller 1969 S88
| |--P. notchpeakensis DJ71
| `--P. serratus LM05
`--+--+--Fryxellodontus Miller 1969 S88 [Fryxellodontidae SD01]
| | |--F. inornatus DJ71
| | `--F. lineatus LM05
| `--Pygodontidae SD01
| |--Nericodus Lindström 1955 S88
| | `--*N. capillamentum Lindström 1954 H62
| `--+--Polonodus Dzik 1976 S88
| | `--P. corbatoi PBJ03
| `--Pygodus Lamont & Lindström 1957 S88, M62
| |--*P. anserinus Lamont & Lindström 1957 M62
| |--P. lyra S88
| `--P. serra S88
`--+--+--Ansellidae SD01
| | |--Ansella Fåhraeus & Hunter 1985 S88
| | | `--A. longicuspica PBJ03
| | `--Hamarodus Viira 1975 S88
| | `--H. europaeus S88
| `--Dapsilodontidae SD01
| |--Besselodus Aldridge 1982 S88
| `--Dapsilodus Cooper 1976 S88
| |--D. mutatus PBJ03
| `--D. obliquicostatus (Branson & Mehl 1933) WBN02
`--Cordylodontidae SD01
|--Cambrooistodus Miller 1980 S88
| |--C. cambricus LM05
| `--C. minutus LM05
`--+--Iapetognathus Landing 1982 S88
| `--I. aengensis S88
`--Cordylodus Pander 1856 S88
| i. s.: C. andresi LM05
| C. hastatus LM05
|--C. lindstromi Druce & Jones 1971 DJ71
|--C. oklahomensis Müller 1959 DJ71
|--C. prion Lindström 1954 DJ71
`--+--C. proavus Müller 1959 DJ71
`--+--*C. angulatus Pander 1856 DJ71
|--C. caseyi Druce & Jones 1971 DJ71
|--C. intermedius Furnish 1938 DJ71
`--C. rotundatus Pander 1856 [incl. C. subangulatus Furnish 1938] DJ71
*Type species of generic name indicated
REFERENCES
[DJ71] Druce, E. C., & P. J. Jones. 1971. Cambro-Ordovician conodonts from the Burke River Structural Belt, Queensland. Commonwealth of Australia, Bureau of National Development, Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics, Bulletin 110: 1–159.
[H62] Hass, W. H. 1962. Conodonts. In: Moore, R. C. (ed.) Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology pt W. Miscellanea: Conodonts, Conoidal Shells of Uncertain Affinities, Worms, Trace Fossils and Problematica pp. W3–W69. Geological Society of America, and University of Kansas Press.
[LM05] Lehnert, O., J. F. Miller, S. A. Leslie, J. E. Repetski & R. L. Ethington. 2005. Cambro-Ordovician sea-level fluctuations and sequence boundaries: the missing record and the evolution of new taxa. Special Papers in Palaeontology 73: 117–134.
[M62] Müller, K. J. 1962. Supplement to systematics of conodonts. In: Moore, R. C. (ed.) Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology pt W. Miscellanea: Conodonts, Conoidal Shells of Uncertain Affinities, Worms, Trace Fossils and Problematica pp. W246–W249. Geological Society of America, and University of Kansas Press.
[PBJ03] Pyle, L. J., C. R. Barnes & Z. Ji. 2003. Conodont fauna and biostratigraphy of the Outram, Skoki, and Owen Creek Formations (Lower to Middle Ordovician), Wilcox Pass, Alberta, Canada. Journal of Paleontology 77 (5): 958–976.
[S88] Sweet, W. C. 1988. The Conodonta: Morphology, taxonomy, paleoecology, and evolutionary history of a long extinct animal phylum. Clarendon Press: Oxford.
[SD01] Sweet, W. C., & P. C. J. Donoghue. 2001. Conodonts: past, present, future. Journal of Paleontology 75 (6): 1174–1184.
[WBN02] Won, M.-Z., R. B. Blodgett & V. Nestor. 2002. Llandoverian (Early Silurian) radiolarians from the Road River Formation of east-central Alaska and the new family Haplotaeniatumidae. Journal of Paleontology 76 (6): 941–964.
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