Coleia
Coleia is an extinct genus of decapods in the group Polychelida that lived from the Late Triassic to the Late Jurassic.[1] It was described by Broderip in 1835, and the type species is C. antiqua. A new species, C. martinlutheri, which existed during the Sinemurian of what is now Germany, was described by Günter Schweigert and Werner Ernst in 2012.[2]
Coleia | |
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Coleia gigantea | |
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Genus: | Coleia Broderip, 1835 |
Type species | |
Coleia antiqua Broderip, 1835 |
Species
- Coleia antiqua Broderip, 1835
- Coleia barrovensis McCoy, 1849
- Coleia boboi Garassino & Gironi, 2006
- Coleia bredonensis Woods, 1925
- Coleia brodiei Woodward, 1866
- Coleia crassichelis Woodward, 1866
- Coleia edwardsi Moriere, 1864
- Coleia gigantea (Van Straelen, 1923)
- Coleia incerta Secretan, 1964
- Coleia longipes Fraas, 1855
- Coleia martinlutheri Schweigert & Ernst, 2012
- Coleia mediterranea Pinna, 1968
- Coleia moorei Woodward, 1866
- Coleia morierei Renault, 1889
- Coleia pinnai Teruzzi, 1990
- Coleia popeyei Teruzzi, 1990
- Coleia sibirica Chernyschev, 1930
- Coleia sinuata Beurlen, 1928
- Coleia tenuichelis Woods, 1925
- Coleia theodorii Kuhn, 1952
- Coleia uzume Karasawa, 2003
- Coleia viallii Pinna, 1968
- Coleia wilmcotensis Woodward, 1866
gollark: Do you have "monitors"?
gollark: You can play Mindustry *and* experience streaming.
gollark: I suppose I can stream it for him, but still.
gollark: But Joshua exists.
gollark: Well, it probably is.
References
- Hiroaki Karasawa; Fumio Takahashi; Eiji Doi; Hideo Ishida (2003). "First notice of the family Coleiidae Van Straelen (Crustacea: Decapoda: Eryonoidea) from the upper Triassic of Japan" (PDF). Paleontological Research. 7 (4): 357–362. doi:10.2517/prpsj.7.357.
- Günter Schweigert; Werner Ernst (2012). "First record of a polychelid lobster (Crustacea: Decapoda: Coleiidae) from the Sinemurian (Early Jurassic) of Germany". Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie. 263 (1): 35–42. doi:10.1127/0077-7749/2012/0207.
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