Apolithabatis
Apolithabatis is an extinct genus of asterodermid rays from the Late Jurassic Torleite Formation of Germany. The genus contains a single species, A. seioma, known from a single complete, well-preserved specimen.
Discovery and naming
The Apolithabatis holotype specimen, DMA-JP-2010/007, was discovered in a Rygol Company limestone quarry representing outcrops of the Torleite Formation near Painten in Lower Bavaria, South Germany. The fossil is a holomorphic specimen, meaning that it comprises a complete, articulated animal. Based on the absence of claspers, it can be identified as a female individual.In 2025, Türtscher et al. described Apolithabatis seioma as a new genus and species of rays in the extinct family Spathobatidae based on these fossil remains. The generic name, Apolithabatis, combines the Greek words απολίθωμα, meaning "fossil", and βατίς, meaning "ray" or "skate". The specific name, seioma, is derived from the Greek word σείω —in turn coming from σεισμός, meaning "shake"—referencing the use of explosives to slabs of rock from the outcrop, one of which contained the holotype.