MolluscaBase taxon details
Eocryphispira X.-H. Yu, 1987 †
1545619 (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:1545619)
accepted
Genus
Eocryphispira basicostatis X.-H. Yu, 1987 † (type by original designation)
fossil only
feminine
Yu, X.-H. (1987). Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous fresh water gastropods (Mollusca) from western Liaoning Province, China. In: Yu, X.-H.; Wang, W.-L.; Liu, X.-T.; Zhang, W.; Zheng, S.-L.; Zhang, Z.-C.; Yu, J.-S.; Ma, F.-Z.; Dong, G.-Y.; Yao, P.-Y. (eds) Mesozoic Stratigraphy and Palaeontology of Western Liaoning, Vol. 3. Geological Publishing House, Beijing. pp. 29-116.
page(s): 88 [Chinese text], 95 [English text] [details] Available for editors
[request]
page(s): 88 [Chinese text], 95 [English text] [details] Available for editors

Status Not classified into any higher gastropod group by X. Yu (1987). The shape reminds of fragments of planorbids. The...
Status Not classified into any higher gastropod group by X. Yu (1987). The shape reminds of fragments of planorbids. The fragmentary preservation does certainly not warrant a separate genus but rather suggests it is a nomen dubium. [details]
MolluscaBase eds. (2025). MolluscaBase. Eocryphispira X.-H. Yu, 1987 †. Accessed at: https://molluscabase.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=1545619 on 2025-09-12
Date
action
by
The webpage text is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution 4.0 License
original description
Yu, X.-H. (1987). Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous fresh water gastropods (Mollusca) from western Liaoning Province, China. In: Yu, X.-H.; Wang, W.-L.; Liu, X.-T.; Zhang, W.; Zheng, S.-L.; Zhang, Z.-C.; Yu, J.-S.; Ma, F.-Z.; Dong, G.-Y.; Yao, P.-Y. (eds) Mesozoic Stratigraphy and Palaeontology of Western Liaoning, Vol. 3. Geological Publishing House, Beijing. pp. 29-116.
page(s): 88 [Chinese text], 95 [English text] [details] Available for editors
[request]
page(s): 88 [Chinese text], 95 [English text] [details] Available for editors

From editor or global species database
Status Not classified into any higher gastropod group by X. Yu (1987). The shape reminds of fragments of planorbids. The fragmentary preservation does certainly not warrant a separate genus but rather suggests it is a nomen dubium. [details]