Algerites

Algerites
Temporal range: middle- Cretaceous
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Cephalopoda
Subclass: Ammonoidea
Order: Ancyloceratida
Superfamily: Turrilitaceae
Family: Anisoceratidae
Genus: Algerites
Pervinquiere, 1910

Algerites is middle Cretaceous (Cenomanian) anisoceratid ammonoid with a close-coiled adult shell in which the whorls at that stage are in close contact, after starting of with openly coiled whorls, and in which every rib (a character of the family) has a pair of sharp ventral tubercles.

Algerites, which is found in North Africa, named for the country of Algeria, is thought to be derived from Idiohammites, also an anisoceratid. It (Algerites) differs from Allocrioceras in that the later whorls come together in close contact where as in the latter they remain apart.

The Anisoceratidae to which this genus is assigned is included in the diverse heteromorphic superfamily Turrilitaceae

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