Cheeneetnukiidae

Cheeneetnukiidae is an extinct family of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the clade Vetigastropoda (according to the taxonomy of the Gastropoda by Bouchet & Rocroi, 2005).

Cheeneetnukiidae
Temporal range: Middle Devonian–Middle Devonian
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
(unranked):
Superfamily:
Family:
Cheeneetnukiidae

Blodgett & Cook, 2002[1]

This family has no subfamilies.

Genera

Genera and species within the family Cheeneetnukiidae include:[2]

  • Cheeneetnukia Blodgett & Cook, 2002 - type genus
    • Cheeneetnukia australis
    • Cheeneetnukia frydai
    • Cheeneetnukia seminodosa
    • Cheeneetnukia spinosa
  • Pingtianispira Cook & Pan, 2004[3]
    • Pingtianispira tuberculata
  • Ulungaratoconcha Blodgett & Cook, 2002
    • Ulungaratoconcha bicoronata
    • Ulungaratoconcha bigranulosa
    • Ulungaratoconcha binodosa
    • Ulungaratoconcha bononi
    • Ulungaratoconcha coronata (E.J.A. d’Archiac & E.P. de Verneuil, 1842) - synonym:[4] Murchisonia coronata E.J.A. d’Archiac & E.P. de Verneuil, 1842[5]
    • Ulungaratoconcha heidelbergeri
    • Ulungaratoconcha intermedia
    • Ulungaratoconcha lennensis

References

  1. Blodgett R. B. & Cook A. G. (2002). "Cheeneetnukiidae, a new Middle Devonian murchisonioid gastropod family, including the new genera Cheeneetnukia and Ulungaratoconcha based on representatives from Alaska and Australia". Memoirs of the Queensland Museum 48(1): 17-28.
  2. Cheeneetnukiidae. The Paleobiology Database. Accessed 14 January 2009.
  3. Cook A. G. & Pan H.-Z. (2004). "Middle Devonian gastropods from Xiangzhou and Wuxuan, Guangxi, South China". Alcheringa 28: 413-429. doi:10.1080/03115510408619291.
  4. Ulungaratoconcha coronata. The Paleobiology Database. Accessed 14 January 2009.
  5. d’Archiac E. J. A. & Verneuil E.P. de. (1842). "On the fossils of the older deposits in the Rhenish Provinces, preceded by a general survey of the fauna of the Palaeozoic rocks, and followed by a tabular list of the organic remains of the Devonian system in Europe". Transactions of the Geological Society of London, Series 2 6(3): 303-410.
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