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Macroscaphites
Extinct genus of molluscs From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Macroscaphites is an extinct cephalopod genus included in the Ammonoidea that lived during the Barremian and Aptian stages of the Early Cretaceous (118 - 110 million years ago). Its fossils have been found throughout most of Europe and North Africa.
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Macroscaphites is known to have reached a length of about 20–30 centimetres (7.9–11.8 in). The shell is in two basic parts, an early planispirally coiled evolute section followed by a more or less straight section that turns back on itself in a hook.
On the basis of studies conducted on the shape of the shell (which take into account the specific weight of the live animal and respective position of the centers of gravity and buoyancy) paleontologists have concluded that this animal lived with the aperture directed toward the surface of the water; the coiled portion upward and the U-shaped-hook directed towards the ocean floor.
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List of species

- Macroscaphites juani (Puzos 1832); Cuba[citation needed]
- Macroscaphites soaresi (Da Silva 1962); Mozambique
- Macroscaphites striasulcatus (Meek 1876)
- Macroscaphites tirolensis (Uhlig, 1887); South Tyrol, Italy
Fossil locations
Fossils of Macroscaphites have been found in:[3]
- Eurasia
- Bulgaria
- Luckovska Formation, the Czech Republic
- France
- Georgia
- Italy
- Serbia and Montenegro
- Forcall Formation, Spain
- Laurentia
- Mexico
- Africa
- Egypt
- Mozambique
- Makatini Formation, South Africa
- South America
- García Formation, Venezuela
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References
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