5-703: Phricodoceratidae is a family in the Eoderoceratoidea , aberrant ammonites from the Lower Jurassic characterized by a large adult size and a marked change of shell form and ornament with growth. Shells are stoutly ribbed, early growth stage is round-whorled with spines, followed by a high-whorled late growth stage with smooth, modified ribbing. Three genera are currently placed in the Phricodoceratidae: Phricodoceras , Epideroceras , and Pseuduptonia . This Ammonitina -related article
10-585: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Eoderoceratoidea Eoderoceratoidea is a superfamily of true ammonites (suborder Ammonitina ) from the Lower Jurassic , comprising seven phylogenetically related families, characterized in general by having ribbed evolute shells that commonly bear spines or tubercles. Adult shell size ranges from 2 or 3 cm to giants reaching 50 cm in such genera as Apoderoceras , Epideroceras , and Liparoceras . The earliest known eodoceroceratoidean
15-515: Is the eoderoceratid genus Microderoceras . Although its origin is uncertain, it is likely that it is derived from the Psiloceratoidea . It has also been proposed, with some imagination, that Microderoceas has its origin some earlier Jurassic lytoceratid such as Analytoceras . Seven families are included, beginning with the Eoceroceratidae, which gave rise at about the same time to
20-799: The Phricodoceratidae, Coeloceratidae, Liparoceratidae, and Polyhmorphitidae. The Phricodoceratidae left no descendants but the Coeloceratidae later gave rise to the Dactylioceratidae and the Liparoceratidae to the Amaltheidae. The Polymorphitidae became the source for the superfamilies Hildocerataceae beginning with the Hildoceratidae. The more recent taxonomy of Donovan et al. (1981) with seven families, differs from that of Arkell, et al. in
25-633: The Treatise (1957) which included just five families. The phricodoceratids and coeoloceratids were then considered as subfamilies (Phricodoceratinae and Coeloceratinae, respectively) of the Eoderoceratidae. As later (1981) the Liparoceratidae and Polyhmorphitidae were derived from the Eoderoceratidae but the Dactylioceratidae were derived separately (1957) from the Lytoceratidae - a source since then largely rejected. This Ammonitina -related article
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