Fagesia
Fagesia Temporal range: Turonian
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Fossil of Fagesia spheroidalis from Japan. Late Cretaceous. Exhibit in the National Museum of Nature and Science, Tokyo, Japan | |
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Genus: | Fagesia Pervinquière 1907
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See text |
Fagesia is a small, subglobular ammonite (suborder Ammonitina) belonging to the vascoceratid family of the Acanthocerataceae that lived during the Turonian stage of the Late Cretaceous, 92-88 Ma ago.
The shell of Fagesia is about 9.5 cm (3.47 in) in diameter, typically with blunt umbilical tubercles from which spring 2 or three ribs each, but which are lost in the late growth stage. The suture is ammonitic with long spikey lobes and saddles with rounded subelements.
Species
- †Fagesia catinus Mantell 1822 - Loma Gorda Formation, Colombia
- †Fagesia fleuryi Pervinquière 1907
- †Fagesia peroni Pervinquière 1907
- †Fagesia pervinquieri Bose 1920
- †Fagesia rudra Stoliczka 1865
- †Fagesia spheroidalis Pervinquière 1907
- †Fagesia superstes Kossmat 1897
- †Fagesia tevesthensis Peron 1896
Distribution
Fossils of Fagesia have been found in Brazil, Colombia (El Colegio, Cundinamarca, La Frontera (Cundinamarca, Huila and Boyacá),[1] and Loma Gorda Formations, Aipe, Huila),[2] Egypt, France, Mexico, Morocco, Nigeria, Oman, Romania, the Russian Federation, Tunisia, United States (Arizona, California, Colorado, New Mexico, Texas), and Venezuela.[3]
References
- ^ Blanco et al., 2004, p.26
- ^ Patarroyo, 2011
- ^ Fagesia at Fossilworks.org
Bibliography
Further reading
- 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.
- Ammonitida genera
- Acanthoceratoidea
- Cretaceous ammonites
- Ammonites of Africa
- Ammonites of Europe
- Cretaceous France
- Ammonites of North America
- Cretaceous Mexico
- Cretaceous United States
- Ammonites of South America
- Cretaceous Brazil
- Cretaceous Colombia
- Fossils of Colombia
- Cretaceous Venezuela
- Turonian life
- Fossil taxa described in 1907
- Ammonitina stubs