Inoceramus

Inoceramus
Temporal range: Jurassic–Cretaceous
Inoceramus from the Cretaceous of South Dakota.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Bivalvia
Subclass: Cryptodonta
Order: Praecardioida
Family: Inoceramidae
Genus: Inoceramus
Sowerby, 1814

Inoceramus (Greek: translation "strong pot") is an extinct genus of fossil marine pteriomorphian bivalves that superficially resembled the related winged pearly oysters of the extant genus Pteria.

Taxonomy

The taxonomy of the inoceramids is disputed, with genera such as Platyceramus sometimes classified as subgenus within Inoceramus. Also the number of valid species in this genus is disputed.

Selected species

  • I. aequicostatusVoronetz 1937
  • I. albertensisMcLearn 1926
  • I. altifluminisMcLearn 1943
  • I. americanusWalaszczyk & Cobban 2006
  • I. andinusWilckens 1907
  • I. anglicusWoods 1911
  • I. anilisPcelinceva 1962
  • I. anomalusHeine 1929
  • I. anomiaeformisFeruglio 1936
  • I. apicalisWoods 1912
  • I. arvanusStephenson 1953
  • I. bellvuensis
  • I. biformisTuomey, 1854
  • I. browneiMarwick 1953
  • I. carsoniMcCoy 1865
  • I. comancheanus
  • I. constellatusWoods 1904
  • I. corpulentusMcLearn 1926
  • I. coulthardiMcLearn 1926
  • I. cuvieriSowerby 1814
  • I. dakotensis
  • I. dominguesiMaury 1930
  • I. dowlingiMcLearn 1931
  • I. dunveganensisMcLearn 1926
  • I. elburzensisFantini 1966
  • I. everestiOppel 1862
  • I. fibrosusMeek & Hayden 1857
  • I. formosulusVoronetz 1937
  • I. fragilisHaal & Meek 1856
  • I. frechiFlegel 1905
  • I. galoiBoehm 1907
  • I. gibbosus
  • I. ginterensisPergament 1966
  • I. glacierensisWalaszczyk & Cobban 2006
  • I. haastiHochstetter 1863
  • I. howelliWhite 1876
  • I. incelebratusPergament 1966
  • I. inconditusMarwick 1953
  • I. kystatymensisKoschelkina 1960
  • I. lamarckiParkinson 1819
  • I. laterisRossi de Gargia & Camacho 1965
  • I. mesabiensisBergquist 1944
  • I. moriiHayami 1959
  • I. multiformisPergament 1971
  • I. mytiliformisFantini 1966
  • I. nipponicusNagao & Matsumoto 1939
  • I. perplexus
  • I. pictus
  • I. pontoniMcLearn 1926
  • I. porrectusVoronetz 1937
  • I. prefragilisStephenson 1952
  • I. proximusTuomey, 1854
  • I. pseudoluciferAfitsky 1967
  • I. quenstedtiPcelinceva 1933
  • I. robertsoniWalaszczyk & Cobban 2006
  • I. sakatchewanensisWarren 1934
  • I. selwyniMcLearn 1926
  • I. sokoloviWalaszczyk & Cobban 2006
  • I. steinmanniWilckens 1907
  • I. subdepressusMeek & Hayden 1861
  • I. tenuirostratusMeek & Hayden 1862
  • I. triangularisTuomey, 1854
  • I. undabundusMeek & Hayden 1862
  • I. ussuriensisVoronetz 1937

[1]

Distribution

The Western Interior Seaway in the Western Interior Sea that covered North America during the Cretaceous

Species of Inoceramus had a worldwide distribution during the Cretaceous and Jurassic periods (from 189.6 to 66.043 Ma). [1] Many examples are found in the Pierre Shale of the Western Interior Seaway in North America. Inoceramus can also be found abundantly in the Cretaceous Gault Clay that underlies London. Other locations for this fossil include Vancouver Island,[2] British Columbia, Canada; Texas, Tennessee, Kansas, California and Alaska, USA; Spain, France, and Germany.

Description

Inoceramids had a thick shell paved with "prisms" of calcite deposited perpendicular to the surface, which gave it a pearly luster in life.[2] Most species have prominent growth lines which appear as raised semicircles concentric to the growing edge of the shell. Paleontologists suggest that the giant size of some species was an adaptation for life in the murky bottom waters, with a correspondingly large gill area that would have allowed the animal to survive in oxygen-deficient waters.[2]


Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 Inoceramus at Fossilworks
  2. 1 2 3 Ludvigsen, Rolf & Beard, Graham. 1997. West Coast Fossils: A Guide to the Ancient Life of Vancouver Island. pg. 102-103
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