Acanthoceratoidea

Acanthoceratoidea, formerly Acanthocerataceae, is a superfamily of Upper Cretaceous ammonoid cephalopods belonging to the order Ammonitida, and comprising some 10 or so families.[1]

Acanthoceratoidea
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous
Mantelliceras tuberculatum
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Cephalopoda
Subclass: Ammonoidea
Order: Ammonitida
Suborder: Ammonitina
Superfamily: Acanthoceratoidea
Hyatt, 1900
Families

see text

Diagnosis

Members of the Acanthoceratoidea are typically strongly ribbed and have a tendency to develop prominent tubercles, although other types including those with oxyconic shells are included.[1]

Taxonomy

Families included in the Acanthoceratoidea[1] are:

Discussion

According to Wright Calloman and Howarth, 1996[2] in the revised version of Part L of the Treatise, the Binneyitidae is replaced by the Forbesiceratidae with the Binneyitidae now in the Hoplitaceae and the Forbesiceratidae included in the Acanthoceratoidea. The Leymeriellidae, based on the Lower Albian genus, Leymeriella, was added, extending the range downward. The name Tissotiidae was replaced by Pseudotissotiidae. The Libycoceratidae, proposed by Zaborski, 1982, for the Upper Campainian - Maastrictian Libycoceras, was split off from the Sphenodiscidae.[3] while the other families remain essentially the same, except for the addition of newer genera.

The replacement of the Tissotiidae by the Pseudotissotiidae in the revised classification of the Acanthoceraticeae in the Treatise (1996) is based on the earlier appearance of the subfamily Psudotissotiinae in the Lower Turonian, followed by the Tissotiinae in the Upper Turonian. Other newer classifications e.g.[4] split the Tissotiidae into two families, the earlier Pseudotissotiidae and the later, revised but smaller, Tissotiidae. Fatmi and Kennedy, 1999, returned Libycoceras, sole genus of the Libycoceratidae, to its original position in the Sphenodicidae, so negating the Libycoceratidae.

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References

  1. W.J Arkell et al., Mesozoic Ammonoidea; Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part L, Ammonoidea. 1957
  2. Paleobiology Database Cretaceous Ammonoidea. Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology Part L, 1996
  3. Paleobiology Database Superfamily Acanthoceratoidea
  4. TABLE DR1.JURASSIC-CRETACEOUS AMMONOIDEA
  • Fatmi, A N, Kennedy, W J, 1999. Maastrichtian ammonites from Balochistan, Pakistan; Journal of Paleontology, July 1999
  • Zaborski, P. M. P. 1982. Campanian and Maastrichtian sphenodiscid ammonites from southern Nigeria. Bull. Br. Mus. nat. Hist. (Geol.) 36(4):303-332
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