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Found 11 results

  1. MikeR

    Turbinella angulata

    Locality is primarily Caloosahatchee but some Bermont is present.
  2. MikeR

    Turbinella regina

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Turbinellidae Turbinella regina (Heilprin, 1886) Stratigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation. Location: SMR Phase 7, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: Found in both the Caloosahatchee and the Tamiami Formations. Separated from other Turbinella by it's narrowness.
  3. MikeR

    Turbinella streami

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Turbinellidae Turbinella streami Petuch, 1991 Stratigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation. Location: SMR Phase 7, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: This species has a shorter spire and more inflated body whorl than T. regina. Quite a bit of variation between T. regina and T. streami exists within the Sarasota area, however I have not seen the same degree of variation within Caloosahatchee specimens of T. regina.
  4. MikeR

    Turbinella scolymoides

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Turbinellidae Turbinella scolymoides Dall, 1890 Stratigraphy: Golden Gate Member of the Tamiami Formation(?). Location: Bonita Grande, Lee County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: A classic Caloosahatcheean species, it could have originated in the warm coral reef facies of the Tamiami or might be from a more southernly exposure of the Caloosahatchee than previously known. Large with a knobbed shoulder and inflated body whorl.
  5. MikeR

    Hystrivasum horridum

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Turbinellidae Hystrivasum horridum (Heilprin, 1886) Stratigraphy: Golden Gate Member of the Tamiami Formation(?). Location: Bonita Grande, Lee County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: A classic Caloosahatcheean species, it could have originated in the warm coral reef facies of the Tamiami or might be from a more southernly exposure of the Caloosahatchee than previously known Very constricted at the base and more spinose than other species of Hystrivasum.
  6. MikeR

    Hystrivasum locklini

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Turbinellidae Hystrivasum locklini (Olsson & Harbinson, 1953) Stratigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: SMR Phase 7, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: Less constricted at the base than H. horridum with more subdued ornamentation. This is the common vase shell from the Sarasota shell pits. The genus is overly split and many of the numerous named species from the Tamiami might be variant of this .
  7. MikeR

    Hystrivasum squamosum

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Turbinellidae Hystrivasum squamosum (Hollister, 1971) Stratigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: SMR Phase 7, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: Similar to H. locklini, but with 5 body chords instead of 4. Possible variant of H. locklini.
  8. MikeR

    Hystrivasum lindae

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Turbinellidae Hystrivasum lindae Petuch, 1994 Stratigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: APAC, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: Similar to H. locklini, but with larger, less numerous knob-like spines along the shoulder and smoother body chords. Possible variant of H. locklini.
  9. MikeR

    Hystrivasum shrinerae

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Turbinellidae Hystrivasum shrinerae (Hollister, 1971) Stratigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: APAC, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: Separated from other Hystrivasum species by the presence of 6 body chords. More common in the Kissimmee River Valley, but very rare at Sarasota.
  10. Harry Pristis

    spiny gastropods

    From the album: ECHINOIDS & OTHER INVERTEBRATES

    Here are three fairly common gastropods from the Pliocene Caloosahatchee Beds in SW Florida. These represent two different families: Turbinellidae and Muricidae. I have duplicates of these shells.

    © Harry Pristis 2013

  11. MikeR

    Vasum chipolense

    Reference E. H. Vokes. 1970. Notes on the fauna of the Chipola Formation - III. Two new species of Vasum (Mollusca: Gastropoda), with comments on Vasum haitense (Sowerby). Tulane Studies in Geology and Paleontology 8(2):88-92
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