Skenidioides
Skenidioides is an extinct genus of brachiopods which existed during the Ordovician, Silurian, and Devonian of what is now Australia, Canada, China, the Czech Republic, Italy, Morocco, Poland, Ukraine, the United States, Belarus, Estonia, Lithuania, Mexico, Norway, Sweden, the United Kingdom, Venezuela, Ireland, Kazakhstan, the Russian Federation, and Argentina. It was described by Schuchert and Cooper in 1931, and the type species is S. billingsi. A new species, S. tatyanae, was described by Andrzej Baliński in 2012, from the early Devonian of Ukraine. The species epithet refers to Tatyana Lvovna Modzalevskaya.[1]
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Genus: | Skenidioides Schuchert & Cooper, 1931 |
Species
- Skenidioides billingsi Schuchert & Cooper, 1931
- Skenidioides cretus Halamski in Baliński, Racki & Halamski, 2016
- Skenidioides kayseri Benedetto, 2003
- Skenidioides anthonense
- Skenidioides tatyanae Baliński, 2012
gollark: Well, it's entirely possible that helloboi was beeoidal with those.
gollark: This is separate from my *submission*, available earlier in the history.
gollark: Well, here's my code, if anyone wants it.
gollark: I mean, C isn't even technically Turing-complete, and Python is written in C, so it's fine.
gollark: Can't ubq solve the halting problem?
References
- Andrzej Baliński (2012). "The brachiopod succession through the Silurian–Devonian boundary beds at Dnistrove, Podolia, Ukraine". Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. in press. doi:10.4202/app.2011.0138.
External links
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