Araxoceras Explained
Araxoceras is an extinct genus of ceratitid ammonites that lived in the Late Permian marine environments of Iran,[1] [2] South China[3] and Japan.[4] The various species had distinctive, angular-cornered shells.
Notes and References
- 10.1134/s003103011006002x. New species of Dzhulfian (Late Permian) ammonoids from the Hambast Formation of Central Iran . 2010 . Zakharov . Yu. D. . Abnavi . N. Mousavi . Yazdi . M. . Ghaedi . M. . Paleontological Journal . 44 . 6 . 614–621 . 129876784 .
- 1302664. Araxoceratidae, Upper Permian Ammonoids, from the Western Hemisphere . Spinosa . Claude . Furnish . W. M. . Glenister . Brian F. . Journal of Paleontology . 1970 . 44 . 4 . 730–736 .
- Zhang. Zong-yan. He. Wei-hong. Zhang. Yang. Yang. Ting-lu. Wu. Shun-bao. Late Permian-Earliest Triassic Ammonoid Sequences from the Rencunping Section, Sangzhi County, Hunan Province, South China and Their Regional Correlation. Geological Science and Technology Information. 1. 2009. 28 . 23–30.
- Ehiro. Masayuki. Permian ammonoid fauna of the Kitakami Massif, northeast Japan. Palaeoworld. 9. 1998. 113–122.