Mortoniceras
Mortoniceras Temporal range:
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Mortoniceras inflatum (Sowerby, 1818) | |
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Family: | Brancoceratidae
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Genus: | Mortoniceras Meek (1876)
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Mortoniceras is an ammonoid genus belonging to the superfamily Acanthocerataceae, named by Meek in 1876, based on Ammonites vespertinu, named by Morton in 1834.
Mortoniceras is the type genus of the Mortoniceratinae, one of 4 subfamilies in the Brancoceratidae which is part of the Acanthocerataceae (renamed Acanthoceratoidea to conform with the ICZN ruling on superfamily endings)
Distribution
Mortoniceras is found in middle and upper Albian sediments, at the end of the Lower Cretaceous in Algeria, Angola, Armenia, Belgium, Canada (British Columbia), Colombia (Hiló Formation), Ecuador, France, Germany, Iran, Japan, Madagascar, Mexico, Mozambique, Nigeria, South Africa, Spain, Suriname, Switzerland, Ukraine, the United Kingdom, the United States (California, New Mexico, Texas, Oregon), and Venezuela.[2]
References
- ^ Sepkoski, Jack (2002). "Sepkoski's Online Genus Database". Retrieved 2014-05-28.
- ^ a b Mortoniceras at Fossilworks.org
Further reading
- Fossils (Smithsonian Handbooks) by David Ward
- Studies on Mexican Paleontology (Topics in Geobiology) by Francisco J. Vega, Torrey G. Nyborg, María del Carmen Perrilliat, and Marisol Montellano-Ballesteros
- Cretaceous ammonites
- Cretaceous animals of Africa
- Ammonites of Europe
- Cretaceous Europe
- Ammonites of North America
- Cretaceous Canada
- Cretaceous Mexico
- Cretaceous United States
- Ammonites of South America
- Cretaceous Colombia
- Cretaceous Ecuador
- Cretaceous Venezuela
- Albian life
- Albian genus extinctions
- Ammonite stubs