Eubaculites

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Eubaculites an entity of type: Thing

Eubaculites is an extinct genus of cephalopods in the family Baculitidae and each known species was initially placed within the related genus Baculites until it was placed in a separate genus in 1926. Eubaculites existed from the Turonian until the Danian, and is one of the very last species of ammonites, going extinct roughly 64.5 million years ago, which was around 500,000 years after the start of the Cenozoic. Specimens found in the Maastricht Formation in The Netherlands suggest that at least one species (E. carinatus) survived the K-Pg mass extinction event, albeit being restricted to the Danian. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Eubaculites
rdf:langString Eubaculites
rdf:langString Eubaculites
xsd:integer 71585668
xsd:integer 1118131158
rdf:langString Ancyloceratina
rdf:langString Baculitidae
rdf:langString ~ Late Cretaceous-Early Paleocene
rdf:langString Eubaculites
rdf:langString Spath, 1926
rdf:langString Eubaculites faujasi fossils in the Teylers Museum, The Netherlands
xsd:integer 250
rdf:langString Ammonitida
rdf:langString *E. carinatus *E. faujasi *E. labyrinthicus *E. latecarinatus *E. simplex *E. vagina
rdf:langString Other species
rdf:langString Eubaculites ootacodensis
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Eubaculites is an extinct genus of cephalopods in the family Baculitidae and each known species was initially placed within the related genus Baculites until it was placed in a separate genus in 1926. Eubaculites existed from the Turonian until the Danian, and is one of the very last species of ammonites, going extinct roughly 64.5 million years ago, which was around 500,000 years after the start of the Cenozoic. Specimens found in the Maastricht Formation in The Netherlands suggest that at least one species (E. carinatus) survived the K-Pg mass extinction event, albeit being restricted to the Danian.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5122

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