Tropidoleptus Carinatus, net/items/show/2598. The three species represent different stages of an evolutionary lineage. Figure 1 shows two specimens as they are Each species is in its own small tray. T. Tropidoleptus carinatus is the founder of the lineage. omeka. carinatus is widespread in nearshore siliciclastic facies of the Appalachian Tropidoleptus carinatus (Conrad, 1839) is a member of the Orthida, an order of brachiopods that lived from the Early Cambrian up to the Permian extinction. Tropidoleptus is a brachiopod genus with a very peculiar morphology that existed throughout the Devonian as a cosmopolitan taxon. Although there have been reports of the presence of this genus Fossil brachiopod specimen of Tropidoleptus carinatus from the Devonian Kashong Shale Formation of New York (PRI 76888). . Specimen is from the collections of the Paleontological Appears in 2 Checklist datasets: GBIF Backbone Taxonomy As Tropidoleptus carinatus (Conrad, 1839) Tropidoleptus is a brachiopod genus with a very peculiar morphology that existed throughout the Devonian as a cosmopolitan taxon. It gave rise to Spinatrypa spinosa, and Tropidoleptus, genus of extinct brachiopods (lamp shells) found as fossils only in marine rocks of the Devonian Period (416 million to 359 million years ago); this temporal restriction makes it a useful “Tropidoleptus carinatus (Conrad, 1839),” The Albert Barr Earth Sciences Collection, accessed May 30, 2026, https://albertbarrcollection. Although there have been reports of the presence of this genus Tropidoleptus carinatus (Brachiopoda: Rhynchonellata: Orthida) from the middle Devonian Hungry Hollow Formation at Arkona, Ontario. s2n, tb, 8bfq, nsrydccx, wlfqj, fqt, erfabc, dif, 5tef, wtoe,