Conorbis is an extinct genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Conorbidae.[2]
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This genus was formerly classified in the family Conidae by Vredenburg (1921)[3] in the clade Neogastropoda by Sepkoski (2002)[4] and in the subfamily Conorbiinae by Harzhauser (2007).[5]
Conorbis is the type genus of the family Conorbidae.[6] The type species of the genus Conorbis is extinct.[6] Species in this genus lack nadules.
Species within the genus Conorbis include:[7]
- † Conorbis aequipartitus (Cossmann, 1889) - "Catalogue Illustré des Coquilles Fossiles de l'Éocène des Environs de Paris. (4ème fascicule). Annales de la Société Royale Malacologique de Belgique, 24: 3 -385 "; Middle-Miocene fossil species from France
- † Conorbis alatoideus (Aldrich, 1885) - "Notes on the Tertiary of Alabama and Mississippi, with descriptions of new species. The Journal of the Cincinnati Society of Natural History, 8 (2 ): 145 -153"; Type Locality: Moody's Branch, Mississippi
- † Conorbis alatus (Edwards, 1856) - "Descriptions of Shells from the Older Tertiaries of England. A Monograph of the Eocene Mollusca, or descriptions of shells from the older Tertiaries of England. Part III, No. II. Prosobranchiata (continued), 3 (2 )"
- † Conorbis aliger (Tracey & Todd, 1996) - "Nomenclatural changes for some Bracklesham gastropods. Tertiary Research, 16: 41 -54"
- † Conorbis amphiconus (J. de C. Sowerby, 1850) - "The Geology and Fossils of the Tertiary and Cretaceous Formations of Sussex"
- † Conorbis bhagothorensis (Vredenburg, 1925) - fossil species from the Oligocene in Pakistan
- † Conorbis dormitor (Solander, 1766) - originally described as Conus dormitor, it was renamed Conorbis dormitor by Swainson in 1840; Oligo-Miocene fossil species from the Lower Indus Valley in Pakistan.
- † Conorbis protensus (Michelotti, 1861) - originally described as Pleurotoma protensa, it was renamed by Sacco in 1893 and confirmed by Harzhauser in 2007;[5] this fossil species is found in the Oligocene in Italy and Oman.
- † Conorbis sindiensis (Vredenburg, 1925) - fossil species from the Early Miocene in Pakistan.
- † Conorbis veselovi (Amitrov, 2008)[8]
- Species brought into synonymy
Swainson W. J. (1840). Treat. Malacol. 149: 312.
Vredenburg E. (1921). "Comparative diagnoses of Conidae and Cancellariidae from the Tertiary formations of Burma". Records of the Geological Survey of India 53: 130-141.
Sepkoski J. J. (2002). "A compendium of fossil marine animal genera". Bulletins of American Paleontology 363: 1-560.
Harzhauser M. (2007). "Oligocene and Aquitanian gastropod faunas from the Sultanate of Oman and their biogeographic implications for the western Indo-Pacific". Palaeontographica Abteilung A 280: 75-121. PDF.
O. V. Amitrov O. V. (2008). The current state of study of the gastropods of the Mandrikovka Beds (Upper Eocene of Ukraine), with the description of a new species of Conorbis. MAIK Nauka, 42(6): 581-584, ISSN 0031-0301.
Bozzetti, L. (1994) Nuova specie dalle Filippine. World Shells, 9, 60–62.
Thiele, J. (1929) Handbuch der Systematischen Weichtierkunde. Vol. 1. Gustave Fischer, Jena, 376 pp.
Long, D.C. (1981) Late Eocene and early Oligocene Turridae (Gastropoda: Prosobranchiata) of the Brown’s Creek and Glen Aire Clays, Victoria, Australia. Memoirs of the National Museum of Victoria, 42, 15–55, pls. 4–7
- von Koenen, A. (1867) Ueber Conorbis und Cryptoconus, Zwischenformen der Gattungen. Palaeontographica, 16, 159–174, pl. 15.
- Tucker, J.K. & Tenorio, M.J. (2009) Systematic Classification of Recent and Fossil Conoidean Gastropods, with Keys to the Genera of Cone Shells. ConchBooks, Hackenheim, Germany, 295 pp