Beecheria

Beecheria is an extinct genus of brachiopod belonging to the order Terebratulida and family Beecheriidae.[1][2] Fossils of this genus have been found in Mississippian[3][4] to Permian beds in Eurasia,[4][5] Australia,[6] North America,[3] and South America.[7] The genus was part of the Levipustula fauna characteristic of cold water conditions.[7] "Nests" of Beecheria have been found in fossil low temperature hydrothermal vent communities from the early Carboniferous in Newfoundland.[8]

Beecheria
Temporal range: Carboniferous-Permian
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Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Brachiopoda
Class: Rhynchonellata
Order: Terebratulida
Family: Beecheriidae
Genus: Beecheria
Hall and Clarke 1893
Species

See text

Species

  • B. angusta Netschajew 1894[5]
  • B. boranelensis Peou and Engel 1979[6]
  • B. chouteauensis Weller 1914[3]
  • B. curva Smirnova 2009[9]
  • B. elliptica Cooper and Grant 1976[10]
  • B. expansa Cooper and Grant 1976[10]
  • B. kargaliensis Smirnova 2007[5]
  • B. lidarensis Diener 1915[4]
  • B. magna Jin and Ye 1979[11]
  • B. netschajewi Grigor'yeva 1967[5]
  • B. samarica Smirnova 2007[5]

References

  1. Williams, A.; Brunton, C.H.C.; Carlson, S.J.; Baker, P.G.; Carter, J.L.; Curry, G.B.; Dagys, A.S.; Gourvennec, R.; Hou, H.F.; Jin, Y.G.; Johnson, J.G.; Lee, D.E.; MacKinnon, D.I.; Racheboeuf, P.R.; Smirnova, T.N.; Sun, D.L. (2006). Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology Part H, Brachiopoda. Volume 5: Rhynchonelliformea. pp. 1689–2320.
  2. Sepkoski, J.J. (2002). "A compendium of fossil marine animal genera". Bulletins of American Paleontology. 363: 1–560.
  3. Carter, J. L. (1967). "Mississippian brachiopods from the Chappel Limestone of central Texas". Bulletins of American Paleontology. 53 (238): 249–488.
  4. Garzanti, Eduardo; Angiolini, Lucia; Brunton, Howard; Sciunnach, Dario; Balini, Marco (April 1998). "The Bashkirian "Fenestella Shales" and the Moscovian "Chaetetid Shales" of the Tethys Himalaya (South Tibet, Nepal and India)". Journal of Asian Earth Sciences. 16 (2–3): 119–141. doi:10.1016/S0743-9547(98)00006-3.
  5. Smirnova, T. N. (October 2007). "Permian terebratulids of Eurasia: Morphology, systematics, and phylogeny". Paleontological Journal. 41 (7): 707–813. doi:10.1134/S0031030107070015.
  6. Peou, S.; Engel, B.A. (1 January 1979). "A Carboniferous fauna from Rawdon Vale, New South Wales". Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology. 3 (2): 141–157. doi:10.1080/03115517908619092.
  7. Cisterna, G.A.; Sterren, A.F. (2008). "Late Carboniferous Levipustula fauna in the Leoncito Formation, San Juan province, Argentine Precordillera: biostratigraphical and palaeoclimatological implications" (PDF). Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria. 120 (1): 137–147. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  8. von Bitter, Peter H.; Scott, Steven D.; Schenk, Paul E. (March 1990). "Early Carboniferous low-temperature hydrothermal vent communities from Newfoundland". Nature. 344 (6262): 145–148. doi:10.1038/344145a0.
  9. Smirnova, T. N. (March 2009). "The ontogeny of the Late Permian terebratulids of the family Beecheriidae Smirnova (Brachiopoda)". Paleontological Journal. 43 (2): 142–152. doi:10.1134/S003103010902004X.
  10. Cooper, G. A.; Grant, Richard E. (1976). "Permian Brachiopods of West Texas, V". Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology (24): 1–551. doi:10.5479/si.00810266.24.1.
  11. Jin, Y. G.; Ye, S. L. (1979). "Permian brachiopod names". Paleontological atlas of northwest China, Qinghai. Vol. 1. pp. 70–131.


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