IRMNG taxon details
original description
in German & Timofeiev, Trudy Inst. Geol. Geofiz. sib. Otd. 632 page(s): 12 [details]
basis of record
Neave, S. A. and successors. (1939-2004). Nomenclator Zoologicus, vols. 1-10 online. [developed by uBio, hosted online at MBLWHOI Library]. Previously at http://ubio.org/NomenclatorZoologicus/ (URL no longer current). , available online at https://insecta.bio.spbu.ru/z/nomenclator_zoologicus_PDF.htm [details]
additional source
Singh, V. K.; Sharma, M. (2022). New material of carbonaceous compressions from the ∼1.5 Ga Singhora Group, Chhattisgarh Supergroup, India, and their interpretation as benthic Algae. <em>Frontiers in Earth Science.</em> 10: a825430., available online at https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2022.825430 note: included as comparable with a species of Jiuqunaoella, the latter considered a coenocytic green alga, refer note [details]
name verified source
Neave, S. A. and successors. (1939-2004). Nomenclator Zoologicus, vols. 1-10 online. [developed by uBio, hosted online at MBLWHOI Library]. Previously at http://ubio.org/NomenclatorZoologicus/ (URL no longer current). , available online at https://insecta.bio.spbu.ru/z/nomenclator_zoologicus_PDF.htm [details]
current name source
German, T. N.; Podkovyrov, V. N. (2009). New insights into the nature of the Late Riphean Eosolenides. <em>Precambrian Research.</em> 173(1-4): 154-162., available online at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2009.03.018 [details]
extant flag source
Neave, S. A. and successors. (1939-2004). Nomenclator Zoologicus, vols. 1-10 online. [developed by uBio, hosted online at MBLWHOI Library]. Previously at http://ubio.org/NomenclatorZoologicus/ (URL no longer current). , available online at https://insecta.bio.spbu.ru/z/nomenclator_zoologicus_PDF.htm [details]
habitat flag source
original work (title/other) [details]
Unreviewed
Taxonomic remark From German & Podkovyrov, 2009: "Studies of a morphologically diverse population of Eosolenides [=Eosolena, Elatera], organic-walled macrofossils from the Upper Mesoproterozoic (1015–1025 Ma) Lakhanda Group of southeastern Siberia, suggest that these elongate fossils may be remains of soft-bodied organisms having tube-grade organization. ... Although in some respects these fossils resemble cnidarians, the biological affinities of Eosolenides tubes [i.e., Eosolena] remain enigmatic." Subsequently, Singh & Sharma, 2022 compare Eosolenides to a species of Jiuqunaoella, which they consider a coenocytic green alga. [details]
| |