WoRMS taxon details
original description
Toulmin, L. D. (1941). Eocene smaller Foraminifera from the Salt Mountain limestone of Alabama. <em>Journal of Paleontology.</em> vol. 15 no. 6: 567-611. page(s): p. 602 [details] Available for editors [request]
original description
(of Eponidoides Brotzen, 1942) Brotzen, F. (1942). Die Foraminiferengattung Gavelinella nov. gen. und die Systematik der Rotaliiformes. <em>Sveriges Geologiska Undersökning.</em> 36(8) C (451): 1-60., available online at https://resource.sgu.se/dokument/publikation/c/c451rapport/c451-rapport.pdf [details] Available for editors [request]
additional source
Loeblich, A. R.; Tappan, H. (1987). Foraminiferal Genera and their Classification. Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, New York. 970pp., available online at https://books.google.pt/books?id=n_BqCQAAQBAJ [details] Available for editors [request]
additional source
Revets, S. A. (1996). The generic revision of five families of Rotaliine Foraminifera - Part 2. The Anomalinidae, Alabaminidae, Cancrisidae & Gavelinellidae. <em>Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research, Special Publication.</em> 57-113., available online at http://www.cushmanfoundation.org/specpubs/sp34.pdf [details] Available for editors [request]
Present Inaccurate Introduced: alien Containing type locality
From editor or global species database
Diagnosis Test trochospiral, lenticular, and biconvex, spiral side evolute, with three whorls and about five chambers in the final whorl, sutures depressed, curved and oblique, umbilical side involute, apertural face deeply excavated from the umbilicus to the periphery, then sharply folded forward at the periphery, sutures radial and slightly depressed, umbilicus closed but depressed, periphery subangular; wall calcareous, optically granular, finely perforate except for a nonperforate peripheral margin, surface smooth; aperture an interiomarginal slit beneath the deeply indented apertural face, extending almost to the periphery from where the apertural face turns forward near the periphery, bordered by a narrow lip. U. Cretaceous (Santonian) to Holocene; cosmopolitan. (Loeblich & Tappan, 1987, Foraminiferal Genera and Their Classification) [details]
From editor or global species database
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