Complete skeletons of Asiatoceratodus sharovi first described by Vorobyeva (1967) from the Middle-Late Triassic deposits of
Fergana valley in Kyrgyzstan.[1][2] This species is characterizes by toothed plates with 4 to 5 crests.[1]
^N. Tabaste. 1963. Étude derestes de poissons du Crétacé saharien [Study of fish remains from the Saharan Cretaceous]. Mélanges Ichthyologiques Dédiés à la Mémoire d’Achille Valenciennes (1794–1865). Mémoires de l’Institute Français d’Afrique Noire 68:437-485
^Martin, M., 1984. Révision des Arganodontidés et des Néocératodontidés (Dipnoi,
Ceratodontiformes) du Crétacé africain. Neues Jb. Geol. Paläontol. Abh. 169, 225–260.
^Kemp, A. 1998. Skull structure in post-paleozoic lungfish. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 18(1): 43-63.
^
abLionel Cavin, Larbi Boudad, Haiyan Tong, Emilie Läng. 2015. "Taxonomic Composition and Trophic Structure of the Continental Bony Fish Assemblage from the Early Late Cretaceous of Southeastern Morocco." PLoS ONE 10(5):e0125786 DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0125786
^D. Perea, M. Soto, G. Verolavsky, S. Martinez, and M. Ubilla. 2009. A Late Jurassic fossil assemblage in Gondwana: biostratigraphy and correlations of the Tacuarembo Formation, Parana Basin, Uruguay. Journal of South American Earth Sciences 28:168-179
^M. B. Goodwin, W. A. Clemens, J. H. Hutchison, C. B. Wood, M. S. Zavada, A. Kemp, C. J. Duffin and C. R. Schaff. 1999. Mesozoic continental vertebrates with associated palynostratigraphic dates from the northwestern Ethiopian plateau. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 19(4):728-741
^"On the dinosaurian and crocodilian locality of Gadoufaoua (Republic of
Niger)" (
PDF). From Mr. Philippe Taquet (1970), presented by Mr. Jean Piveteau.