Fayolia

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Fayolia
Temporal range: Late Devonian–Middle Triassic
Scientific classification
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Fayolia

Renault & Zeiller, 1884
Binomial name
Fayolia dentata
Renault & Zeiller, 1884
Other species
  • F. sterzelianaWeiss, 1887
  • F. sharoviFischer et al., 2011
Synonyms
  • Fayolia sterzeli

Fayolia is a genus of fossil egg capsule, widely thought to have been produced by xenacanths. [1] The egg is elongate and tapers towards both ends, and surrounded by helically twisted collarettes, with one end (the beak) having a tendril. [2]

It is predominantly known from freshwater deposits with 16 species spanning a stratigraphic range from the Late Devonian to the Middle Triassic. [2] A new species, Fayolia sharovi, was described in 2011 from lacustrine deposits of the Middle Triassic Madygen Formation in Kyrgyzstan, Central Asia. [3]

Related Research Articles

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<i>Longisquama</i> Extinct genus of reptiles

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<i>Bystrowiana</i> Extinct genus of amphibians

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The Madygen Formation is a Late Triassic (Carnian) geologic formation and Lagerstätte in the Batken and Osh Regions of western Kyrgyzstan, with minor outcrops in neighboring Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. The conglomerates, sandstones and mudstones of the 560 m (1,840 ft) thick formation were deposited in terrestrial lacustrine, alluvial, fluvial and deltaic environments.

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<i>Palaeoxyris</i> Trace fossil

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Rhynchosauroides is an ichnogenus, a form taxon based on footprints. The organism producing the footprints was likely a lepidosaur and may have been a sphenodont, an ancestor of the modern tuatara. The footprint consists of five digits, of which the fifth is shortened and the first highly shortened.

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References

  1. Jörg W. Schneider; Wolfgang Reichel (1989). "Chondrichthyer-Eikapseln aus dem Rotliegenden (Unterperm) Mitteleuropas — Schlußfolgerungen zur Paläobiologie paläozoischer Süsswasserhaie". Freiberger Forschungshefte . C 436: 58–69.
  2. 1 2 Fischer, Jan; Licht, Martin; Kriwet, Jürgen; Schneider, Jörg W.; Buchwitz, Michael; Bartsch, Peter (2014-04-03). "Egg capsule morphology provides new information about the interrelationships of chondrichthyan fishes". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 12 (3): 389–399. doi:10.1080/14772019.2012.762061. ISSN   1477-2019.
  3. Jan Fischer; Sebastian Voigt; Jörg W. Schneider; Michael Buchwitz; Silke Voigt (2011). "A selachian freshwater fauna from the Triassic of Kyrgyzstan and its implication for Mesozoic shark nurseries". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology . 31 (5): 937–953. doi:10.1080/02724634.2011.601729. S2CID   85753690.