Kossmaticeras
Kossmaticeras is an extinct ammonoid genus belonging to the desmoceratacean family Kossmaticeratidae. Species in this genus were fast-moving nektonic carnivores.[1] They lived during the Late Cretaceous, from upper Turonian to upper Maastrichtian age.[2] The type species of the genus is Ammonites theobaldianus.[1]
Kossmaticeras | |
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Kossmaticeras species from Madagascar | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Mollusca |
Class: | Cephalopoda |
Subclass: | †Ammonoidea |
Order: | †Ammonitida |
Family: | †Kossmaticeratidae |
Genus: | †Kossmaticeras de Grossouvre, 1901 |
Synonyms | |
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Subgenera and species
- Kossmaticeras (Karapadites) Collignon, 1954
- Kossmaticeras (Karapadites) besairieri Collignon, 1954
- Kossmaticeras (Karapadites) karapadensis Kossmat, 1897
- Kossmaticeras (Karapadites) madrasinus Stoliczka, 1865
- Kossmaticeras (Karapadites) planissimus Collignon, 1966
- Kossmaticeras (Kossmaticeras) de Grossouvre, 1901
- Kossmaticeras (Kossmaticeras) inornatum Collignon, 1966
- Kossmaticeras (Kossmaticeras) jeletzkyi Collignon, 1965
- Kossmaticeras (Kossmaticeras) jonesi Collignon, 1965
- Kossmaticeras (Kossmaticeras) kilenensis Alsen, 2018
- Kossmaticeras (Kossmaticeras) sakondryense Collignon, 1954
- Kossmaticeras (Kossmaticeras) sparsicostatum Kossmat, 1897
- Kossmaticeras (Kossmaticeras) theobaldianum Stolickza, 1865
- Kossmaticeras (Natalites) Collignon, 1954
- Kossmaticeras (Natalites) africanus van Hoepen, 1920
- Kossmaticeras (Natalites) elegans Kennedy, 1985
- Kossmaticeras (Natalites) similis Spath, 1921
- Kossmaticeras (Natalites) canadense McLearn, 1972
Distribution
Fossils of species within this genus have been found in the Cretaceous sediments of Antarctica, Australia, Canada, Chile, India, Madagascar, New Zealand and South Africa.
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gollark: Why would they *not* be? It isn't like there's much particularly everyone-killing stuff likely to happen in the next few decades.
gollark: Sorry, -100000, not that it matters at all.
gollark: Since, if you trap it right, all outcomes cause it to have an expected outcome of -10000, it will just treat them all as equally bad and pick the first one.
References
Further reading
- Arkell et al. 1957. Mesozoic Ammonoidea, L374; Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology Part L (Ammonoidea); Geol Soc of America and Univ Kansas Press.
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