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  2. Anomphalus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anomphalus

    Anomphalus jaggerius is an extinct species of Permian sea snail. Fossils have been found in Artinskian era limestone from the Bird Spring Formation in the southern Arrow Canyon Range of the US State of Nevada. The species, which had a shell 6.37 millimetres (0.251 in) wide, was a subtidal epifaunal grazer. [1]

  3. Anguispira russelli - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anguispira_russelli

    The fossil gathered by Tozer is 14 mm (0.55 in) in width and 7 mm (0.28 in) in height. The shell is a depressed heliciform in shape with 5 whorls that gradually increase in size from the umbilicus and a thin outer lip. The shell is rounded and coarsely striate, with the umbilicus taking up 1/3 of the shell. [1]

  4. Pleurotomariidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleurotomariidae

    Pleurotomariidae, common name the "slit snails", is a family of large marine gastropods in the superfamily Pleurotomarioidea of the subclass Vetigastropoda. [1] This family is a very ancient lineage; there were numerous species in the geological past.

  5. List of marine gastropod genera in the fossil record - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_marine_gastropod...

    This list of marine gastropod genera in the fossil record is an attempt to list all the genera of sea snails or marine gastropod mollusks which have been found in the fossil record. Nearly all of these are genera of shelled forms, since it is relatively rare for gastropods without a shell ( sea slugs ) to leave any recognizable traces.

  6. Discus macclintocki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discus_macclintocki

    The algific talus slope habitat that harbors the snail is a landscape cooled by air and water emerging from masses of subterranean ice. The ground temperature rarely exceeds 10 °C (50 °F), even in summer. Here the snail feeds on leaf litter from trees (mainly birch, maple and dogwood) and shrubs. During the winter, it burrows underground and ...

  7. Turritella - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turritella

    One variety of "Turritella agate", that from the Green River Formation in Wyoming, is a fossiliferous rock which does indeed contain numerous high-spired snail shells. However, contrary to the common name, these snails are not in the marine genus Turritella , instead they are freshwater snails in the species Elimia tenera , family Pleuroceridae ...

  8. Hexaplex trunculus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexaplex_trunculus

    The snail appears in fossil records dating between the Pliocene and Quaternary periods (between 3.6 and 0.012 million years ago). Fossilized shells have been found in Morocco, Italy, and Spain. [3] This sea snail is historically important because its hypobranchial gland secretes a mucus used to create a distinctive purple-blue indigo dye.

  9. Neogastropoda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neogastropoda

    Two neogastropods, Brunneifusus ternatanus (left) and Murex trapa (right) in captivity. The available fossil record of Neogastropoda is relatively complete, and supports a widely accepted evolutionary scenario of an Early Cretaceous origin of the group followed by two rapid diversification rounds in the late Cretaceous and the Paleocene.