Search results for "Eutrephoceras"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Ammonite extinction and nautilid survival at the end of the Cretaceous

2014

One of the puzzles about the end-Cretaceous extinctions is why some organisms disappeared and others survived. A notable example is the differential extinction of ammonites and survival of nautilids, the two groups of co-occurring, externally shelled cephalopods at the end of the Cretaceous. To investigate the role of geographic distribution in explaining this outcome, we compiled a database of all the occurrences of ammonites and the nautilid genus Eutrephoceras in the last 0.5 m.y. of the Maastrichtian. We also included recently published data on ammonite genera that appear to have briefly survived into the Paleocene. Using two metrics to evaluate the geographic range of each genus (first…

Geographic distributionAmmonitePaleontologyExtinctionbiologyGenuslanguageEutrephocerasGeologybiology.organism_classificationCretaceouslanguage.human_languageGeology
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An unusual conchorhynch from the upper Maastrichtian of the southeast Netherlands and the distinction between nautiloid and ammonoid conchorhynchs (M…

2022

Abstract A single, atypical conchorhynch (calcitic tip of a cephalopod lower jaw), recovered from the uppermost Meerssen Member (Maastricht Formation, upper Maastrichtian) at the former ENCI-HeidelbergCement Group quarry, south of Maastricht, is described as a new parataxon, Conchorhynchus illustris sp. nov. The specimen can be differentiated from all previous conchorhynch records on account of its large size, elongated shape and, in particular, of the structure of its apical part which is smooth and forwardly elongated. During the Late Cretaceous, conchorhynchs formed part of the jaw apparatus of nautilids and of two ammonoid suborders, Phylloceratina and Lytoceratina. Since conchorhynchs …

ParataxonomyMaastricht FormationbiologyConchorhynchusPhylloceratinaPaleontologyEutrephocerasJaw apparatusbiology.organism_classificationNautiloidCretaceousCephalopodPaleontologyNew taxonGroup (stratigraphy)LytoceratinaMolluscaGeologyCretaceous Research
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