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Tuarangia is a Cambrian shelly fossil interpreted as an early bivalve, [1] though alternative classifications have been proposed and its systematic position remains controversial. [2] It is the only genus in the extinct family Tuarangiidae [ 3 ] and order Tuarangiida . [ 1 ]
The largest known extinct bivalve is a species of Platyceramus whose fossils measure up to 3,000 mm (118 in) in length. [ 64 ] In his 2010 treatise, Compendium of Bivalves , Markus Huber gives the total number of living bivalve species as about 9,200 combined in 106 families. [ 65 ]
Gryphaea, one of the genera known as devil's toenails, is a genus of extinct oysters, marine bivalve mollusks in the family Gryphaeidae. These fossils range from the Triassic period to the middle Paleogene period [citation needed], but are mostly restricted to the Triassic and Jurassic. They are particularly common in many parts of Britain.
The family Camyidae was first proposed by Hinz-Schallreuter in a 2000 paper discussing the Cambrian bivalves from Bornholm and reviewing the proposed Cambrian bivalve taxa of the time. In the same paper, Hinz-Schallreuter noted that the species Modiolopsis thecoides , known from one specimen which is now lost, most likely belonged to Camya . [ 3 ]
Neithea is an extinct genus of bivalve molluscs that lived from the Early Jurassic to the early Paleocene, with a worldwide distribution. [1] Neithia sp. are inequivalve. That means that the two valves are not the same shape, the right valve being strongly concave and the left valve being flattened or concave.
This category lists bivalve taxa which are extinct according to Wikipedia's Conservation status categories: Bivalves that are extinct according to the IUCN Red List; Bivalves that became extinct after the year 1500. Bivalve taxa which died out before 1500 are listed in Category:Prehistoric gastropods.
Similodonta is a small bivalve which was first described in 1964 by Helen Soot-Ryen in an Arkiv för Mineralogi och Geologi, Kungliga Svenska Vetenskapsakademien paper. [3] Generally the shells of Similodonta are rounded on the ventral sides of the shell and triangular on the dorsal sides. The triangular shape on the dorsal side is formed by ...
Gryphea dilatata, common name "devil's toenail" [1] is a species of Jurassic oyster, an extinct marine bivalve mollusc in the family Gryphaeidae.. This fossil oyster is frequently found in abundance in the localities where it occurs.