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・ Cranial nerves
・ Cranial neural crest
・ Cranial root of accessory nerves
・ Cranial Screwtop
・ Cranial ultrasound
・ Cranial vault
・ Craniate
・ Cranichideae
・ Cranichidinae
・ Cranichis
・ Cranichis candida
・ Cranichis muscosa
・ Cranichis ricartii
・ Cranid
・ Craniforma
Craniidae
・ Cranio-corpography
・ Cranioceras
・ Cranioclast
・ Craniodiaphyseal dysplasia
・ Craniofacial
・ Craniofacial abnormality
・ Craniofacial prosthesis
・ Craniofacial Society of Great Britain and Ireland
・ Craniofacial surgery
・ Craniofacial team
・ Craniofrontonasal dysplasia
・ Craniolaria
・ Cranioleuca
・ Craniomandibular osteopathy


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Craniidae : ウィキペディア英語版
| synonyms = Valdiviathyrididae}}The Craniidae are a family of brachiopods (lamp shells). Although it belongs to a subdivision called the inarticulata which have shells where the mineral content consist of calcium phosphate, the Craniidae have shells that consist of calcium carbonate. Other special characteristics of this family are that no outgrowths are developed to form a hinge between both valves, nor is there any support for the lophophore. As adults, craniids either lived free on the ocean floor or, more commonly, were attached to a hard object with all or part of the ventral valve. All other brachiopods are supposed to have a stalk or pedicle, at least as an adolescent, but in craniids a pedicle is not known from any development stage.They are the only members of the order Craniida and the monotypic suborder Craniidina and superfamily Cranioidea; consequently, the latter two taxa are presently redundant and not used very often. ''Valdiviathyris'' and ''Neoancistrocrania'' were sometimes separated in a family Valdiviathyrididae but this has turned out to be unjustified.Robinson & Lee (2007)Most Craniidae are long extinct forms known only from fossils like all other Craniforma. However, some 20 species of this 470-million-year-old lineage are surviving today. They include ''Valdiviathyris quenstedti'' which has remained essentially unchanged for the last 35 million years or so. Although some minimal evolution would obviously have taken place in the meantime, this was essentially silent mutations and marginal adaptations to cooler habitat. Present-day ''Valdiviathyris'' are all but inseparable from those of the Late Eocene and the genus cannot even be divided into chronospecies. Thus, ''V. quenstedti'' is a true living fossil and one of the oldest and most long-lived species known to science.== References ==* (2007): The Recent and Paleogene craniid brachiopod, ''Valdiviathyris quenstedti'' Helmcke, 1940. ''Systematics and Biodiversity'' 5(1): 123–131. (HTML abstract)

| synonyms = Valdiviathyrididae
}}
The Craniidae are a family of brachiopods (lamp shells). Although it belongs to a subdivision called the inarticulata which have shells where the mineral content consist of calcium phosphate, the Craniidae have shells that consist of calcium carbonate. Other special characteristics of this family are that no outgrowths are developed to form a hinge between both valves, nor is there any support for the lophophore. As adults, craniids either lived free on the ocean floor or, more commonly, were attached to a hard object with all or part of the ventral valve. All other brachiopods are supposed to have a stalk or pedicle, at least as an adolescent, but in craniids a pedicle is not known from any development stage.
They are the only members of the order Craniida and the monotypic suborder Craniidina and superfamily Cranioidea; consequently, the latter two taxa are presently redundant and not used very often. ''Valdiviathyris'' and ''Neoancistrocrania'' were sometimes separated in a family Valdiviathyrididae but this has turned out to be unjustified.〔Robinson & Lee (2007)〕
Most Craniidae are long extinct forms known only from fossils like all other Craniforma. However, some 20 species of this 470-million-year-old lineage are surviving today. They include ''Valdiviathyris quenstedti'' which has remained essentially unchanged for the last 35 million years or so. Although some minimal evolution would obviously have taken place in the meantime, this was essentially silent mutations and marginal adaptations to cooler habitat. Present-day ''Valdiviathyris'' are all but inseparable from those of the Late Eocene and the genus cannot even be divided into chronospecies. Thus, ''V. quenstedti'' is a true living fossil and one of the oldest and most long-lived species known to science.〔
== References ==

* (2007): The Recent and Paleogene craniid brachiopod, ''Valdiviathyris quenstedti'' Helmcke, 1940. ''Systematics and Biodiversity'' 5(1): 123–131. (HTML abstract)


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「| synonyms = Valdiviathyrididae}}The Craniidae are a family of brachiopods (lamp shells). Although it belongs to a subdivision called the inarticulata which have shells where the mineral content consist of calcium phosphate, the Craniidae have shells that consist of calcium carbonate. Other special characteristics of this family are that no outgrowths are developed to form a hinge between both valves, nor is there any support for the lophophore. As adults, craniids either lived free on the ocean floor or, more commonly, were attached to a hard object with all or part of the ventral valve. All other brachiopods are supposed to have a stalk or pedicle, at least as an adolescent, but in craniids a pedicle is not known from any development stage.They are the only members of the order Craniida and the monotypic suborder Craniidina and superfamily Cranioidea; consequently, the latter two taxa are presently redundant and not used very often. ''Valdiviathyris'' and ''Neoancistrocrania'' were sometimes separated in a family Valdiviathyrididae but this has turned out to be unjustified.Robinson & Lee (2007)Most Craniidae are long extinct forms known only from fossils like all other Craniforma. However, some 20 species of this 470-million-year-old lineage are surviving today. They include ''Valdiviathyris quenstedti'' which has remained essentially unchanged for the last 35 million years or so. Although some minimal evolution would obviously have taken place in the meantime, this was essentially silent mutations and marginal adaptations to cooler habitat. Present-day ''Valdiviathyris'' are all but inseparable from those of the Late Eocene and the genus cannot even be divided into chronospecies. Thus, ''V. quenstedti'' is a true living fossil and one of the oldest and most long-lived species known to science.== References ==* (2007): The Recent and Paleogene craniid brachiopod, ''Valdiviathyris quenstedti'' Helmcke, 1940. ''Systematics and Biodiversity'' 5(1): 123–131. (HTML abstract)」の詳細全文を読む



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