Mauidrillia
Mauidrillia is a genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Horaiclavidae, the turrids.[1]
Mauidrillia | |
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Scientific classification ![]() | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Mollusca |
Class: | Gastropoda |
Clade: | Caenogastropoda |
Clade: | Hypsogastropoda |
Clade: | Neogastropoda |
Superfamily: | Conoidea |
Family: | Horaiclavidae |
Genus: | Mauidrillia A.W.B. Powell, 1942 |
Type species | |
Mangilia praecophinodes Suter, 1917 | |
Species | |
See text |
Species
Species within the genus Mauidrillia include:
A.W.B. Powell (1944) mentions also a number of Australian species from the Lower Miocene to Recent[2]
- † Mauidrillia acuta (Marwick, 1928)
- † Mauidrillia angustata Powell, 1942
- † Mauidrillia browni Marwick, 1943
- † Mauidrillia cinctuta (Marwick, 1929)
- † Mauidrillia clavicula Powell, 1942
- † Mauidrillia costifer (Suter, 1917)
- Mauidrillia felina Kilburn, 1988[3]
- † Mauidrillia fimbriata Laws, 1947
- † Mauidrillia imparilirata Powell, 1942
- † Mauidrillia inaequalis Powell, 1942
- † Mauidrillia incerta Beu, 1970
- † Mauidrillia occidentalis Maxwell, 1988
- † Mauidrillia praecophinodes (Suter, 1917)
- † Mauidrillia supralaevis Powell, 1942
- † Mauidrillia unilirata Powell, 1942
gollark: > About the latter half of the question, the inverse square root law would imply that the rules that generally put down magnetism are removed.What? No. It wouldn't imply that, because galactic orbits run on gravity and have nothing to do with electromagnetism.
gollark: Galaxy rotation just runs on regular gravity-driven orbits like, well, the solar system and whatnot, no? I don't know if your claim about the "inverse square root law" thing is accurate, but it doesn't seem to mean very much.
gollark: What do you mean "galaxies rotations are described using a inverse square root law" exactly?
gollark: Hmm, yes, I suppose stars count, so just "not important in large-scale interactions directly".
gollark: The strong nuclear force is much stronger than electromagnetism, but also not important in cosmology because it's short range.
References
- Mauidrillia Powell, 1942. Retrieved through: World Register of Marine Species on 15 April 2010.
- Powell, Arthur William Baden. "The Australian Tertiary Mollusca of the Family Turridae." Records of the Auckland Institute and Museum 3.1 (1944): 3-68.
- Mauidrillia felina Kilburn, 1988. Retrieved through: World Register of Marine Species on 15 April 2010.
- Powell, A.W.B. 1942: The New Zealand Recent and fossil Mollusca of the family Turridae. Bulletin of the Auckland Institute and Museum 2: 188 p
- P. A. Maxwell. 1988. Late Miocene Deep-Water Mollusca from the Stillwater Mudstone at Greymouth, Westland, New Zealand: Paleoecology and Systematics. New Zealand Geological Survey Paleontological Bulletin 55
External links
- Marwick, J. "Transactions and Proceedings of the Royal Society of New Zealand 1868-1961." Proc. US Nat. Mus 45 (1913): 235.
- Marwick, J. "The Tertiary Mollusca of the Chatham Islands including a generic revision of the New Zealand Pectinidae." Transactions of the New Zealand institute. Vol. 58. No. 4. 1928
- Marwick, J. Some Tertiary Mollusca from North Otago. publisher not identified, 1943
- Beu, A. G. "Marine Mollusca of the last 2 million years in New Zealand. Part 5. Summary." Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 42.1 (2012): 1-47
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