Binneyitidae
Appearance
Binneyitidae Temporal range: Late Cenomanian to early Santonian
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Family: | Binneyitidae Reeside, 1927
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Binneyitidae is a family of Upper Cretaceous ammonoid cephalopods characterized by rather small, compressed, flat sided shells and sutures that tend to have deep, narrow, simple elements with parallel sides, that range from the upper Cenomanian into the lower Santonian.[1]
Three genera are included, as follows.
- Borrisjakoceras Arkangelski 1916 - Shells moderately evolute to rather involute, venter bluntly trapezoidal to rounded. Stratigraphic range: U Cenomanian - L Turonian. Found in Kansas, Montana, and Turkmenistan.
- Binneyites Reeside, 1917 - Shells very involute, venter flat. Ventrolateral ornament stronger than on Borrisjakoceras. First found in the Coniacean of Wyoming. Range known from middle Turronian to the lower Santonian.
- Johnsonites Cobban 1961 - Type and only known species is Johsonites sulcatus.
Binneyitidae, according to C.W. Wright et al., 1996, is now regarded as belonging to the Haploceratoidea. Originally the Binneyitidae was included in the Acanthoceratoidea based on the possibility of descent from a compressed acanthoceratid such as Protacanthoceras.
References
[edit]This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (June 2015) |
- ^ Arkell, W.J.; Kummel, B.; Wright, C.W. (1957). Mesozoic Ammonoidea. Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part L, Mollusca 4. Lawrence, Kansas: Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press.
- W.A. Cobban, The ammonite family Binneyitidae Reeside in the Western Interior of the United States, Abstract [1]
- C.W. Wright et al., 1996. Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology (Revised ) L(4). Fossilworks Binneyitidae