Acanthohoplites

Acanthohoplites is an extinct genus of ammonites in the family Parahoplitidae that lived in the Aptian and Early Albian stages of the Early Cretaceous.[1]

Acanthohoplites
Temporal range: Aptian-Early Albian
~122.46–109.0 Ma
A. hannoverensis Hannover (Germany)
Scientific classification
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Acanthohoplites

Sinzow, 1908
Species

See text

Synonyms
  • Acanthoplites
  • Protacanthoplites Tovbina 1970

Taxonomy

The taxonomic position in the Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology Pt L, 1957 placed the genus into the family Deshayesitidae. Newer classifications have revised that placement and the genus is now included into the family Parahoplitidae.[2] Parahoplites and Hypacanthoplites are similar genera.

Description

These ammonites have a strongly ribbed shell and ammonitic suture. Early whorls are coronate, which later become round, then oval in section. Primary ribs may have swellings (bullae) at the umbilicus or are without. In early stages primary ribs branch mid flank at prominent lateral tubercles. In later stages lateral tubercles are reduced or absent and primary ribs branch simply at the umbilical shoulder or, again, mid flank. Sutural elements are subquadrate with narrow, shallow embayments. The first lateral lobe tends to be symmetrical.

Species

The following species have been described, either as Acanthoplites or Acanthohoplites.[1]

  • A. abichi
  • A. aschiltaensis
  • A. belohasifakaensis
  • A. berkleyi
  • A. bigoureti
  • A. erraticus
  • A. hannoverensis
  • A. hesper
  • A. impetrabilis
  • A. interiectus[3]
  • A. manerensis
  • A. midoensis
  • A. mitiensis
  • A. paucicostatus
  • A. schucherti
  • A. soaranensis
  • A. teres
  • A. trifurcatus
  • A. venustus

The species A. nolani was described as Hoplites nolani and later designated the type species of the genus Nolaniceras in 1961, and was subsequently renamed as Nolaniceras nolani.[2]

Distribution

Acanthohoplites has been found in Upper Aptian and Lower Albian sediments in Europe, Central Asia, East Africa, North and South America:[1]

gollark: I mean, it would be quite easy to use the orbital trespasser magnets™.
gollark: IIRC it isn't actually that lambda-calculus-related, since you can just do "bind [opponent health] [deal damage]" or something like that.
gollark: I do know roughly how it works.
gollark: Or for anthropic reasons.
gollark: I would only do so ironically.

References

  1. Acanthohoplites at Fossilworks.org
  2. Bulot, LG; Latil, J-L; Hairabian, A; Fournillon, A (2014). "New insight on the genus Nolaniceras Casey, 1961 (Ammonoidea, Cretaceous) and its consequences on the biostratigraphy of the Aptian Stage". Proceedings of the Geologists' Association. 125 (2): 227–232. doi:10.1016/j.pgeola.2013.12.006.
  3. Gómez & Salgado, 2017, p.17

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Arkell,et al., Mesozoic Ammonoidea; Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part L, Ammonoidea. Geol Soc of America and Univ Kansas press, 1957. R.C. Moore (ed)
  • Sepkoski's Online Genus Database
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