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  2. Evolution of cephalopods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_cephalopods

    Fossil orthoconic nautiloid from the Ordovician of Kentucky; an internal mold showing siphuncle and half-filled camerae, both encrusted.. Understanding of early cephalopod origins is by necessity biased by the available fossil material, which on the whole consists of shelly fossils.

  3. Orthoceras - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthoceras

    Orthoceras is a genus of extinct nautiloid cephalopod restricted to Middle Ordovician-aged marine limestones of the Baltic States and Sweden. This genus is sometimes called Orthoceratites. Note it is sometimes misspelled as Orthocera, Orthocerus or Orthoceros.

  4. Cephalopod beak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cephalopod_beak

    The beak of a giant squid. All extant cephalopods have a two-part beak, or rostrum, situated in the buccal mass and surrounded by the muscular head appendages. The dorsal (upper) mandible fits into the ventral (lower) mandible and together they function in a scissor-like fashion. [1] [2] The beak may also be referred to as the mandibles or jaws ...

  5. Orthocone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthocone

    Fossilised Orthoceras orthocones.. An orthocone is the long, cone-shaped shell belonging to several species of ancient nautiloid cephalopod—the prehistoric ancestors of today's marine cephalopod mollusks, including the cuttlefishes, nautiluses, octopuses and squids. [1]

  6. Orthocerida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthocerida

    Orthocerida, also known as the Michelinocerida, is an order of extinct orthoceratoid cephalopods that lived from the Early Ordovician) possibly to the Late Triassic 1] A fossil found in the Caucasus suggests they may even have survived until the Early Cretaceous 2] and the Eocene fossil Antarcticeras is sometimes considered a descendant of the orthocerids although this is disputed.

  7. Acanthoceras (ammonite) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acanthoceras_(ammonite)

    Their shells had ornate ribs whose function is unknown, although some scientists have speculated that these ribs helped strengthen the animals' shells to allow them to live at greater depths where the water pressure is higher. An adult had a shell diameter of approximately 100 centimetres (39 in).

  8. Treptoceras - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treptoceras

    Treptoceras is a fossil cephalopod genus included in the orthocerid family ... It has been found in Ordovician rocks dated from about 460.9 to 445.6 Ma in South Korea ...

  9. Volborthella - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volborthella

    Volborthella is an animal of uncertain classification, whose fossils pre-date .It has been considered for a period a cephalopod. [6] However discoveries of more detailed fossils showed that Volborthella’s small, conical shell was not secreted but built from grains of the mineral silicon dioxide (silica), and that it was not divided into a series of compartments by septa as those of fossil ...