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Invertebrates: Turritella (sea snails), bryozoans, clams, crabs, shrimp and some sharks; Denali National Park and Preserve [Note 3] Cantwell Formation: Late Cretaceous: North America: US: Alaska: Non-Avian Dinosaur tracks, [2] plants, insects Dinosaur Provincial Park [Note 2] Dinosaur Park Formation: Cretaceous (Campanian) North America: Canada ...
A fossil of the species P. vandenengeli is notable for having been preserved in situ in the shell of an ammonite. Along with a lack of fossils of hermit crabs in gastropod shells from before the Late Cretaceous , this suggests that ammonite shells may have played a more important role in the early evolution of hermit crabs' characteristic shell ...
Nodicoeloceras is genus of ammonite that lived during early to middle Toarcian stage of early Jurassic. Members of this genus existed from Exaratum Subzone of Falciferum Zone to Commune subzone of Bifrons Zone. Their fossils were found in Europe, northern Africa, Asia, North America and South America. [1]
Diagram of ammonite soft tissue anatomy based on other cephalopods along with a cross section (right). Note that shape and length of tentacles are speculative. Although ammonites do occur in exceptional lagerstatten such as the Solnhofen Limestone, their soft-part record is surprisingly sparse. Beyond a tentative ink sac and possible digestive ...
This list of ammonites is a comprehensive listing of genera that are included in the subclass †Ammonoidea, excluding purely vernacular terms. The list includes genera that are commonly accepted as valid, as well as those that may be invalid or doubtful ( nomina dubia ), or were not formally published ( nomina nuda ), as well as junior ...
Hamites ("hook-like") is a genus of heteromorph ammonite that evolved late in the Aptian stage of the Early Cretaceous and lasted into the Cenomanian stage of the Late Cretaceous. The genus is almost certainly paraphyletic but remains in wide use as a "catch all" for heteromorph ammonites of the superfamily Turrilitoidea that do not neatly fit ...
The most distinctive feature of the majority of the Ancyloceratina is the tendency for most of them to have shells that are not regular spirals like most other ammonites. These irregularly-coiled ammonites are called heteromorph ammonites, in contrast to regularly coiled ammonites, which are called homomorph ammonites.
Echioceras is an extinct genus of ammonites from the Early Jurassic of Europe and North America. Description