CMNH 3806, Stenodomatoceras gardi (Murphy, 1970)

CMNH 3806, Stenodomatoceras gardi (Murphy, 1970)

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CMNH 3806, Stenodomatoceras gardi (Murphy, 1970) Age: Late Pennsylvanian (Missourian) Glenshaw formation Columbiana Co., OH Collector: John J. Burke Cephalopods thrive as living marine mollusks distinguished by tentacles attached to a cone-shaped body. The name cephalopod originates from the Greek kephalopoda, "head-feet." Most fossilized cephalopods encase their bodies with an external calcareous shell. The shell may be straight (orthoconic), curved (cyroconic), or coiled in shape. As cephalopods grow, shells are sealed off into increasingly large chambers, while the body remains connected by soft tissue through a thin tube called the siphuncle. Many cephalopods live today - cuttlefish, squid, and octopus - but only the Nautilus maintains a coiled shell. (David and Mapes 1996, "Phylum Mollusca, Class Cephalopoda") Cited in Murphy, J. 1970. Coiled Nautiloid Cephalopods from the Brush Creek Limestone of Eastern Ohio and Western PA. Journal of Paleontology, 44(2), 195-205.

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