Agathiceras Applini
''Agathiceras applini'' is a species of ''Agathiceras'', named by Plummer and Scott in 1937. The mollusc was a fast moving nektonic carnivore and had an average shell width of 6.23 mm and shell diameter of 9.54 mm. References Agathiceratidae Fossil taxa described in 1937 {{Goniatitida-stub ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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Agathiceratidae
Agathiceratidae, as revised, makes up the goniatitid superfamily Agathiceratoidea. Agathiceratidae, which lived from the Upper Carboniferous (Pennsylvanian) to the Middle Permian, combine related genera with subdiscoidal to globular shells that have a small umbilicus and goniatitic sutures and are prominently longitudinally lirate. (Miller ''et al.'' 1960) The explanation for the Agathiceratidae is that for the Agathiceratoidea. Agathiceratidae may have its origin in ''Dombarites'' (Saunders ''et al.'' 1999) which has been removed to the Delepinoceratidae (Furnish ''et al.'' 2009). Delepinoceratidae is now one of two families that make up the Goniatitoidea. In current taxonomy (Furnish ''et al.'' 2009), Agathiceratidae contains '' Agathiceras'', '' Gaetanoceras'', '' Paragathiceras'', and '' Pericleites'' as compared to ''Dombarites'', '' Paracravenoceras'', ''Periclietes'', '' Proshumardites'', and ''Agathiceras'' in Saunders ''et al.'' (1999). ''Paracravenoceras'' is now ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |