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Buccinaria okinawa

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Buccinaria okinawa
Original image of a shell of Buccinaria okinawa
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Subclass: Caenogastropoda
Order: Neogastropoda
Superfamily: Conoidea
Family: Raphitomidae
Genus: Buccinaria
Species:
B. okinawa
Binomial name
Buccinaria okinawa
F.S. MacNeil, 1960

Buccinaria okinawa is an extinct species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Raphitomidae.[1]

Description

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The length of the shell attains 15.5 mm, its diameter 8 mm.

(Original description) The shell is of medium size. It is inflated with the spire shorter than the aperture. The whorls are subcarinate to subrounded. The protoconch is small, conical and pointed, consisting of 2½ whorls ornamented with fine, diagonally cancellate or "sinusigerid" sculpture. The aperture is rather broad and forms a broad short siphonal canal anteriorly. The outer lip is thin, gently curving, and narrowly indented to form a weak anal sinus along the subsutural slope. The parietal callus is weak with the sculpture on the lower part of the whorls partly dissolved with the advance of the callus. The sculpture consists of axial nodes along the periphery which flatten out rapidly both above and below the periphery, those of the young stages being sharp and denticulate. The shell is covered by raised spiral lines which are finer and more closely set above the periphery but broader and more widely spaced towards the base of the whorl. The interspaces on the lower part of the whorl bear secondary and even tertiary threads. [2]

Distribution

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Fossils of this marine species were found in Miocene strata in Okinawa

References

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  1. ^ Worldwide Mollusc Species Data base: Buccinaria okinawa
  2. ^ MacNeil, F.S. (1961). "Tertiary and Quaternary Gastropoda of Okinawa" (PDF). U. S. Geological Survey Professional Paper. (339): 1–148. Retrieved 27 June 2024. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.