Goldringia

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Goldringia an entity of type: Mollusca

Goldringia is an extinct nautilid of the Rutoceratidae family that lived during the Middle Devonian. It is known from New York, Ohio, and Indiana in the United States. Goldringia, named by Rousseau Flower in 1945, has a shell, coiled so as whorls do not touch. The cross section is slightly broader than high; the dorsum on the inside curvature is flatter than venter on the outside curvature. The siphuncle is ventral, tubular and free of organic deposits. The shell is encircled periodically by crenulate frills, each of which is bent apically so as for form a well defined , but are without spoutlike or spinose projections. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Goldringia
xsd:integer 36403216
xsd:integer 1085165349
rdf:langString Flower, 1945
rdf:langString Middle Devonian
rdf:langString Diorama of a Devonian seafloor - Goldringia nautiloid cephalopod eating a trilobite .jpg
rdf:langString Goldringia cyclops from the Middle Devonian of Ohio.
rdf:langString Goldringia
rdf:langString Goldringia is an extinct nautilid of the Rutoceratidae family that lived during the Middle Devonian. It is known from New York, Ohio, and Indiana in the United States. Goldringia, named by Rousseau Flower in 1945, has a shell, coiled so as whorls do not touch. The cross section is slightly broader than high; the dorsum on the inside curvature is flatter than venter on the outside curvature. The siphuncle is ventral, tubular and free of organic deposits. The shell is encircled periodically by crenulate frills, each of which is bent apically so as for form a well defined , but are without spoutlike or spinose projections. Halloceras, from the Lower Devonian, is a similar, gyroconic rutoceratid.
rdf:langString Model of Goldringia eating a trilobite, Carnegie Museum of Natural History
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 1924

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