Calamophylliopsis Explained
Calamophylliopsis is a genus of extinct stony corals. They lived from the Early Jurassic to Late Oligocene (around 189 to 23 Ma).
Species
- C. cervina
- C. compacta
- C. compressa
- C. crassa
- C. elegans
- C. etalloni
- C. flabellum
- C. fotisalensis
- C. klothoensis
- C. kyrvakarensis
- C. lombricalis
- C. marini
- C. moreauana
- C. sandbergeri
- C. simonyi
- C. stockesi
- C. vidali
- C. alternicosta
Distribution
Fossils of Calamophylliopsis have been registered in:
- JurassicAzerbaijan, Bulgaria, China, Colombia (Coquina Group, La Guajira), Croatia, the Czech Republic, Ethiopia, France, Georgia, Germany, Indonesia, Iran, Morocco, Myanmar, Oman, Poland, Portugal, Romania, the Russian Federation, Serbia and Montenegro, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerland, Thailand, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, the United Kingdom, and Uzbekistan.
- CretaceousBulgaria, China, Croatia, the Czech Republic, France, Georgia, Greece, Iran, Mexico, Poland, Romania, Slovenia, Spain, Switzerland, Trinidad and Tobago, USSR, Ukraine, United States (Arizona), Uzbekistan, and Venezuela.
- PaleoceneFrance
- EoceneCroatia
- OligoceneSlovenia
See also