Tripteroceratidae

The Tripteroceratidae is a family of depressed, straight to slightly curved nautiloid cephalopods from the middle and upper Ordovician with generally flattened venters and empty siphuncles with straight to inflated sedments included in the Oncocerida (Sweet, 1964).

Tripteroceratidae
Temporal range: M-U Ordovician
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Cephalopoda
Subclass: Nautiloidea
Order: Oncocerida
Family: Tripteroceratidae
Flower (1941)
Genera

See text

The Tripteroceratidae appeared almost simultaneously with the Oncoceratidae and Valcouroceratidae early in the Middle Ordovician, and are most likely derived from the Graciloceratidae.

Genera

The Tripteroceratdae includes five known genera, as briefly described.

Tripteroceras, the type genus, named by Hyatt (1884) is characterized by a small, straight or slightly exogastric shell with a broad, depressed triangular cross section. The venter, underneath, is flat, the dorsum, above, broadly rounded with a median ridge or keel and lateral angles acute. (Sweet 1964). The siphuncle is small, ventral, and with segments that are only slightly expanded, and thought to be empty. Tripteroceras is known from North America and possibly Norway.

Allumettoceras, from the Middle and Upper Ordovician of North America and northern Europe, is similar to Tripteroceras except the siphuncle which starts off suborthochoanitic becomes cyrtochoanitic with subspherical segments in the later growth stages. Allumettoceras was named by Foerste in 1926

Hadoceras, named by Strand in 1934, is a tripteroceratid with a broadly arched under side and more highly arched upper, respectively venter and dosum. The siphuncle, located between the center and ventral margin, is cyrtochoantic; segments are expanded within the chambers and have faint annulosiphonate deposits lining the septal openings. Hadoceras is known from the Upper Ordovician of Norway.

Rasmussenoceras, named by Foerste (1932); a tripteroceratid from the middle and upper Ordovician of North America and Greenland with a broadly lenticular section and sharp lateral angles, in which the ventral siphuncle is suborthochoantitic to orthohoantic with segments only slightly expanded into the chambers.

Tripterocerina, like Tripteroceras except that the dorsum is fluted as well as keeled. Tripterocerina, named by Foerste (1935) comes from the Upper Ordovician of North America (Wyoming)

gollark: It could be run from a separate PID 1, and use TOML or some actually-usable language to write service files.
gollark: What would be neat is a modernized and usable but *non-systemd* service manager.
gollark: The trouble is that systemd is a giant monolith which random things now tie deeply into.
gollark: The basics of service manager-ing aren't massively complex, so I suppose it'd be doable to implement your own.
gollark: It's a shame there wasn't some sort of middle ground where we got a reasonable service manager which didn't take over the entire system.

References

  • Flower, R. H. and Kummel B, 1950; A Classification of the Nautiloidea; Journal of Paleontology V24 n.5 Sept 1950
  • Sweet, W. C. 1964; Nautiloidea-Oncocerida, in the Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology; Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press.
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.