Kamerunoceras, named by R.A. Reyment in 1954, was tentatively included in the acanthoceratid subfamily Mammitinae in W.J. Arkell, et al (1957), but has since been combined with Euomphaloceras, previously of the Acanthoceratinaeibid, in the Euomphaloceratinae.[1]Kamerunoceras is described as being very evolute with a rectangular whorl section and umbilical tubercles only in the middle growth section. Ventrolateral tubercles, found mostly throughout, are spinose. Ribs are irregular, straight at first, becoming denser and sigmoid on the outer whorl.[2]
Species
The following species of Kamerunoceras have been described:[3]
K. andinum Renz, 1982
K. antsaronense Collignon, 1965
K. calvertense Powell, 1963
K. douvillei (Pervinquière, 1907)
K. eschii (Solger, 1904)
K. ganuzai Wiedmann, 1960
K. inaequicostatus Wiedmann, 1960
K. isovokyense Collignon, 1965
K. lecointrei Collignon, 1966
K. puebloense Cobban & Scott, 1972
K. salmuriensis Courtiller, 1867
K. schindewolfi Collignon, 1965
K. tinrhertense Collignon, 1965
K. turoniense D'Orbigny, 1850
Distribution
Fossils of Kamerunoceras have been found in Austria, Brazil, Cameroon, Colombia (La Frontera and San Rafael Formations),[4][5] Egypt, France, Mexico, Nigeria, Romania, Tunisia, United States (Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Utah), Venezuela.[6]
Arkell, W.J.; Furnish, W.M.; Kummel, Bernhard; Miller, A.K.; Moore, R.C.; Schindewolf, O.H.; Sylvester-Bradley, P.C.; Wright, C.W. (1957), Mesozoic Ammonoidea, Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, vol. Part L, Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press, pp. 1–490
W. A. Cobben and Hook, S. C. 1983 Mid-Cretaceous (Turonian) ammonite fauna from Fence Lake area of west-central New Mexico. Memoir 41, New Mexico Bureau of Mines & Mineral Resources, Socorro NM.