| Buthoidea Temporal range:   | |
|---|---|
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| Odonturus dentatus | |
| Scientific classification  | |
| Domain: | Eukaryota | 
| Kingdom: | Animalia | 
| Phylum: | Arthropoda | 
| Subphylum: | Chelicerata | 
| Class: | Arachnida | 
| Order: | Scorpiones | 
| Suborder: | Neoscorpionina | 
| Superfamily: | Buthoidea C. L. Koch, 1837  | 
| Families | |
  | |
Buthoidea is the largest superfamily of scorpions. Its members are known as fat-tailed scorpions and bark scorpions. A few very large genera (Ananteris, Centruroides, Compsobuthus, or Tityus) are known, but a high number of species-poor or monotypic ones also exist.[1] They occur in the warmer parts of every major landmass on Earth, except on New Zealand.[1] The superfamily was established by Carl Ludwig Koch in 1837.[1]
Taxonomy
Five families are placed into Buthoidea, two extant families Buthidae and Microcharmidae, plus three extinct families.
- †Archaeobuthidae (Lebanese amber, Hauterivian)
 - Buthidae (Modern, Cenomanian - Recent)
 - Microcharmidae (Modern, Recent)
 - †Palaeoburmesebuthidae (Burmese amber, Cenomanian)
 - †Protobuthidae ( Grès à Voltzia Formation, Anisian)
 - †Sucinlourencoidae (Burmese amber, Cenomanian)
 
References
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