Phestia

<i>Phestia</i>

Phestia

Extinct genus of clam


Phestia is an extinct genus of clam belonging to order Nuculanida and family Nuculanidae.[1][2]

Quick Facts Scientific classification, Species ...

Specimens have been found on all seven continents.[3][4]

Species

  • P. basedowi Etheridge Jr., 1907[5]
  • P. corrugata Hoare et al., 1989[6]
  • P. darwini de Koninck, 1877[7]
  • P. guizhouensis Xu, 1980[8]
  • P. hunanensis Ku and Chen, 1963[9]
  • P. inflata Morningstar, 1922[10]
  • P. inflatiformis Chernyshev, 1989[11]
  • P. jamesi Biakov, 2002[12]
  • P. lusabaensis Dickins, 1999[13]
  • P. nova Waterhouse, 1983[14]
  • P. obtusa Hoare et al. 1989[6]
  • P. pandoraeformis Stevens, 1858[15]
  • P. perumbonata White, 1880[16]
  • P. sabbatinae Pagani, 2004[17]
  • P. sinuata Dembskaja, 1972[18]
  • P. speluncaria Geinitz, 1848[19]
  • P. subucuta Waagen, 1881[20]
  • P. thompsoni Reed, 1932[21]
  • P. undosa Muromtseva, 1984[12]
  • P. wortheni Hoare et al. 1989[6]
  • P. zhejiangensis Liu, 1976[22]

References

  1. Ros_Franch, S.; Márquez-Aliaga, A.; Damborenea, S.E. (10 April 2014). "Comprehensive database on Induan (Lower Triassic) to Sinemurian (Lower Jurassic) marine bivalve genera and their paleobiogeographic record". Paleontological Contributions. 8: 1–219. doi:10.17161/PC.1808.13433. hdl:11336/84503.
  2. "Fossilworks: Phestia". Fossilworks. Retrieved 2021-12-10.
  3. "Mindat.org". mindat.org. Retrieved 2021-12-10.
  4. "Mindat.org". mindat.org. Retrieved 2021-12-10.
  5. Dickins, J.M. (1963). "Permian pelecypods and gastropods from western Australia". Bulletin of the Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics. 63: 1–203.
  6. Hoare, R. D.; Heaney, M. J.; Mapes, R. H. (September 1989). "Bivalves (Mollusca) from the Imo Formation (Mississippian, Chesterian) of north-central Arkansas". Journal of Paleontology. 63 (5): 582–603. Bibcode:1989JPal...63..582H. doi:10.1017/S0022336000041226.
  7. Clarke, M.J. (1992). "Hellyerian and Tamarian (Late Carboniferous-Lower Permian) invertebrate faunas from Tasmania". Tasmania Geological Survey Bulletin. 69: 1–54.
  8. Xu, J.T. (1980). "Nomina nuda". Late Permian Stratigraphy and Fossils in Western Guizhou and Eastern Yunnan.
  9. Fang, Z.J.; Yin, D.W. (1995). "Discovery of fossil bivalves from Early Permian of Dongfang, Hainan Island with a review of glaciomarine origin of Nanlong diamictites". Acta Palaeontologica Sinica. 34: 301–315. Retrieved 10 December 2021.
  10. Branson, C.C. (1958). "New names for Pennsylvanian mollusks". Oklahoma Geology Notes. 18 (4): 72.
  11. Zong-Jie, Fang; Cope, John C. W. (September 2004). "Early Ordovician bivalves from Dali, West Yunnan, China". Palaeontology. 47 (5): 1121–1158. Bibcode:2004Palgy..47.1121Z. doi:10.1111/j.0031-0239.2004.00403.x.
  12. Biakov, A. S. (May 2019). "Bivalves of Northeast Asia at the Carboniferous–Permian Transition". Paleontological Journal. 53 (3): 241–251. Bibcode:2019PalJ...53..241B. doi:10.1134/S0031030119030055.
  13. Dickins, J.M. (31 March 1999). "Mid-Permian (Kubergandian-Murgabian) bivalves from the Khuff Formation, Oman: Implications for world events and correlation". Rivista italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia. 105 (1). doi:10.13130/2039-4942/5364.
  14. Waterhouse, J.B. (1983). "Systematic summary, IN The sequence of Permian rocks and faunas near Exmoor Homestead south of Collinsville, north Bowen Basin". Permian Geology of Queensland. pp. 231–267.
  15. Hoare, R.D. (2007). "Bivalve mollusks from the Maxville Limestone (Mississippian) in Ohio". The Ohio Journal of Science. 107 (4): 63–75. hdl:1811/45131. Retrieved 10 December 2021.
  16. Yancey, T.E. (1978). "Brachiopods and mollusca of the Lower Permian Arcturus Group, Nevada and Utah, Part 1: brachiopods, scaphopods, rostroconchs, and bivalves". Bulletins of American Paleontology. 74 (303): 257–367.
  17. Neves, Jacqueline Peixoto; Anelli, Luiz Eduardo; Simões, Marcello Guimarães (July 2014). "Early Permian post-glacial bivalve faunas of the Itararé Group, Paraná Basin, Brazil: Paleoecology and biocorrelations with South American intraplate basins". Journal of South American Earth Sciences. 52: 203–233. Bibcode:2014JSAES..52..203N. doi:10.1016/j.jsames.2014.03.001.
  18. "Mindat.org". mindat.org. Retrieved 2021-12-10.
  19. Fang, Z.J. (1987). "Bivalves from the upper part of the Permian in southern Hunan, China". Collection of Postgraduate Theses of the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Academia Sinica. 1987 (1): 349–411.
  20. "Mindat.org". mindat.org. Retrieved 2021-12-10.
  21. Liu, B.P.; Cui, X.S. (1983). "Discovery of Eurydesma fauna from Rutog, northwest Xizang (Tibet), and its biogeographic significance". Earth Science - Journal of Wuhan College of Geology. 19 (1): 79–92.
  22. Fang, Z.J.; Yin, D.W. (1995). "Discovery of fossil bivalves from Early Permian of Dongfang, Hainan Island with a review of glaciomarine origin of Nanlong diamictites". Acta Palaeontologica Sinica. 34: 301–315.



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