Mesojassoides
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Mesojassoides Temporal range:
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Genus: | †Mesojassoides Oman, 1937
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Species: | †M. gigantea
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†Mesojassoides gigantea Oman, 1937
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Mesojassoides is a genus of extinct leaf hopper from the Late Cretaceous, approximately 70 - 66 million years ago, Fox Hills Formation.[1] The genus contains a single species Mesojassoides gigantea, described from a fore wing found in 1932 by C.H. Dane and W. G. Pierce in Adams County, Colorado.[1] Described by Paul W. Oman in 1937, the genus was named for the similarity in vein structure between the holotype and the modern genus Jassus.[1] The holotype specimen, National Museum of Natural History #75521, is 12 millimetres (0.47 in) long and nearly complete, missing the clavus and a small section of the costal margin.[1] The specimen indicates M. gigantea was similar in size to the largest modern leaf hopper species.[1]
References
Categories:
- Articles with short description
- Short description is different from Wikidata
- Articles with 'species' microformats
- Fossil taxa described in 1937
- Cretaceous insects
- Cicadellidae genera
- Fossils of the United States
- Prehistoric insects of North America
- Extinct Hemiptera
- All stub articles
- Cicadellidae stubs
- Cretaceous insect stubs