Guanlingoceras (IPA: [gʊɑnlɪŋoʊsɛrʌs]) (meaning "Guanling Horn") is a genus of trachyceratid ammonite from the Triassic Xiaowa Formation in Guizhou, China. The type and only species is Guanlingoceras guanlingensis, known from eight specimens comprising various well preserved shells and incomplete shells.[1]

Guanlingoceras
Temporal range:
Carnian, 237–227 Ma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Cephalopoda
Subclass: Ammonoidea
Order: Ceratitida
Family: Trachyceratidae
Subfamily: Sirenitinae
Genus: Guanlingoceras
Mao et al., 2024
Type species
G. guanlingensis
Mao et al., 2024

Description

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Guanlingoceras is known from eight specimens which were referred to G.. guanlingensis by Mao et al., (2024). The holotype, GMG20230804002 consists of a partial shell. The other seven paratypes consist of various specimens of different sizes and levels of completeness.[1]

Etymology

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The generic name, Guanlingoceras (IPA: [gʊɑnlɪŋoʊsɛrʌs]), is named after Guanling County of which the type locality is close to, combined with the Latin suffix '-ceras' which is common in shelled cephalopods. The word itself refers to a horn or anything made out of horn such as the shell of an ammonite. The specific name, guanlingensis (IPA: [gʊɑnlɪŋɛnsɪs]), states where the species comes from, the Greek suffix '-ensis' denoting where something comes from geographically.[1]

Classification

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Mao et al., (2024) deetermined Guanlingoceras to be in the sirenitid family inside Ceratitida due to similarities between both Yakutosirenites and Neosirenites. A "meticulous comparison [which] (revealed) distinctions from other genera of ammonoids."[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Mao, Kainan; Yang, Wei; Huang, Yongling; Ma, Zhiheng (4 August 2024). "A new ammonite genus of the Xiaowa Formation from Guanling Counties, Guizhou Province, China". Taylor & Francis Online. doi:10.1080/08912963.2024.2382230.