Parafaveoloolithus is an oogenus of Faveoloolithid fossil egg, known from the Cretaceous of China.[1]
Parafaveoloolithus Temporal range:
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Egg fossil classification | |
Basic shell type: | †Dinosauroid-spherulitic |
Oofamily: | †Faveoloolithidae |
Oogenus: | †Parafaveoloolithus Zhang, 2010 |
Oospecies | |
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Description
editParafaveoloolithus is diagnosed by its spherical or oval eggs, with a single layer of eggshell units (or a two superimposed layers in some portions). The growth lines of the shell units are undefined. Shell units are prismatic, and separated near the surface of the eggshell.[1]
Oospecies
editParafaveoloolithus contains six oospecies:
- P. microporus - Spherical eggs from the Tiantai basin with a single layer of eggshell units. They are roughly 14 cm in diameter, with an eggshell that is 2.2-2.35 mm thick. It is very similar to Faveoloolithus ningxiaensis.[1]
- P. xipingensis - Described in 1998 as a species of Youngoolithus. It is from the Upper Cretaceous of Xixia County, Henan Province.[2] It was moved to Parafaveoloolithus because of its slender prismatic shell units and straight pores.[1]
- P. macroporus - Oval eggs, known from the Tiantai basin, with large pore canals. The eggs are symmetrical, and about 13 cm in diameter.[1]
- P. tiansicunensis - Also from Tiantai, P. tiansicunensis is very similar to P. microporus and P. macroporus, but it has a thinner shell and the pore canals narrow sharply near the outer surface of its shell.[1]
- P. guoqingensis - Spherical eggs 18.7 cm in diameter, native to Tiantai, with numerous pores looking like a honeycomb in cross-section. This oospecies was originally described as an oospecies of Dendroolithus by Fang et al. (2000), but was moved to Parafaveoloolithus by Wang et al. (2011).[3]
- P. pingxiangensis - This oospecies, first described by Zou et al. (2013), is quite distinct from the other Parafaveoloolithus oospecies because its shell is composed of several superimposed shell units. It was classified in Parafaveoloolithus because of the shell units assembling in the upper and middle portions of the shell. It is native to the Pingxiang basin of Jiangxi Province.[4]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f Zhang, S.K. 2010. A parataxonomic revision of the Cretaceous faveoloolithid eggs of China. Vertebrata PalAsiatica 48(3):203-219
- ^ Fang X.S., Lu L.W., Cheng Z.W., et al. (1998) On the Cretaceous eggs of Xixia County, Henan Province. Beijing : Geological Publishing House. 1-125.
- ^ Wang Qiang, Zhao Zi-kui, Wang Xiao-lin, and Jiang Yan-gen. (2011) "New ootypes of dinosaur eggs from the Late Cretaceous in Tiantai Basin, Zhejiang Province, China." Vertebrata PalAsiatica 49(4):446-449.
- ^ Zou S.L, Wang Q., and Wang X.L. (2013) "A new oospecies of parafaveoloolithids from the Pingxiang Basin, Jiangxi Province of China." Vertebrata PalAsiatica. 51(2):102-106.