Basic info Taxonomic history Classification Included Taxa
Morphology Ecology and taphonomy External Literature Search Age range and collections

Sulcocypraea lintea

Gastropoda - Eocypraeidae

Taxonomy
Cypraea lintea was named by Conrad (1848). It is a 3D body fossil. Its type locality is Vicksburg, which is in a Rupelian marine marl in the Byram Marl Formation of Mississippi.

It was recombined as Cypraeorbis lineata by Garvie (1996); it was recombined as Sulcocypraea lintea by Conrad (1865), Schilder (1941), Harris and Palmer (1947), MacNeil and Dockery (1984) and Fehse (2013).

Synonymy list
YearName and author
1848Cypraea lintea Conrad p. 113 figs. PI. 11, f. 7; PI. 13, f. 4
1865Sulcocypraea lintea Conrad
1941Sulcocypraea lintea Schilder p. 104
1947Sulcocypraea lintea Harris and Palmer p. 319
1984Sulcocypraea lintea MacNeil and Dockery pp. 99 - 100 figs. Plate 28, figures 13-16,20-22; Plate 40, figures 26-28
1996Cypraeorbis lineata Garvie p. 56
2013Sulcocypraea lintea Fehse p. 132

Is something missing? Join the Paleobiology Database and enter the data

RankNameAuthor
kingdomAnimalia()
Bilateria
EubilateriaAx 1987
Protostomia
Spiralia
superphylumLophotrochozoa
phylumMollusca
classGastropoda
subclassCaenogastropoda(Cox 1959)
RankNameAuthor
Sorbeoconcha(Ponder and Lindberg 1997)
Hypsogastropoda(Ponder and Lindberg 1997)
superorderLatrogastropodaRiedel 2000
superfamilyCypraeoidea(Rafinesque 1815)
familyEocypraeidaeSchilder 1924
subfamilySulcocypraeinaeSchilder 1939
tribeSulcocypraeiniSchilder 1939
genusSulcocypraeaConrad 1865
specieslintea()

If no rank is listed, the taxon is considered an unranked clade in modern classifications. Ranks may be repeated or presented in the wrong order because authors working on different parts of the classification may disagree about how to rank taxa.

Sulcocypraea lintea Conrad 1848
show all | hide all
Diagnosis
ReferenceDiagnosis
T. A. Conrad 1848Ovate, elevated, ventricose, with four appriximate equal im pressed lines; base ventricose, profoundly striated; labrum margin much thickened, profoundly striated; summit of the labrum prominent: base slightly produced. Length 6-10. Rare.