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Lithostrotion
Extinct genus of corals From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Lithostrotion is a genus of rugose coral which is commonly found as a fossil within Carboniferous Limestone. Lithostrotion is a member of the family Lithostrotionidae. The genus Lithostrotion, a common and readily recognised group of fossils, became extinct by the end of the Palaeozoic era.[1]
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Species
- Lithostrotion affine Fleming, 1828
 - Lithostrotion araneum (McCoy, 1844)[2]
 - Lithostrotion banffense Warren, 1927
 - Lithostrotion concinum Lonsdale, 1845
 - Lithostrotion decipiens (McCoy, 1849)
 - Lithostrotion edmondsi Smith, 1928
 - Lithostrotion fasciculatum Fleming, 1828
 - Lithostrotion fuicatum Thomson, 1887
 - Lithostrotion gracile McCoy, 1851
 - Lithostrotion irregulare Phillips, 1836
 - Lithostrotion junceum Fleming, 1828
 - Lithostrotion maccoyanum Milne-Edwards & Haime, 1851
 - Lithostrotion martini Milne-Edwards & Haime, 1851
 - Lithostrotion mclareni Sutherland, 1958
 - Lithostrotion mutabile (Kelly, 1942)
 - Lithostrotion pauciradiale McCoy, 1844
 - Lithostrotion sinuosum (Kelly, 1942)
 - Lithostrotion sociale Phillips, 1836
 - Lithostrotion termieri Rodríguez & Somerville in Rodríguez, Somerville & Said, 2017
 - Lithostrotion vorticale (Parkinson, 1808)
 - Lithostrotion warreni Warren, 1960
 
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References
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