When T. carpenteri was considered a species of Dakosaurus, its relatively long snout and smaller, more numerous teeth were thought to be features retained from more basal metriorhynchids. Because of this, the species was seen as a transitional form between long-snouted, piscivorous metriorhynchids and hypercarnivorous, short-snouted species of Dakosaurus.[3] The species was named to honour Simon Carpenter, an amateur geologist from Frome in Somerset, who provided access to the fossil material.
| Graph IRI | Count |
|---|---|
| http://dbkwik.webdatacommons.org | 8 |