Pteortrigonia thoracica is an extinct species of bivalve that lived about 65-70 million years ago in the Maastrichtian age of the late Cretaceous Period.
Tennessee has a state fossil - the bivalve mollusc, Pterotrigonia thoracica. It is from the Late Cretaceous.
Pterotrigonia thoracica, an extinct bivalve mollusk, likely fed on microscopic organisms such as phytoplankton and detritus by filtering them from the water using its gills. Little is known about its specific feeding habits, but it is assumed to have been a filter feeder like many other bivalves.
Pterotrigonia thoracica lived in marine environments during the Mesozoic era, around 200 million years ago. They thrived in warm, shallow seas with sandy or muddy bottoms. These bivalves were filter feeders, using their tentacles to capture plankton and other small particles for food.
Hellinsia thoracica was created in 1939.
Culoptila thoracica was created in 1938.
Chlorhoda thoracica was created in 1910.
Tennessee doesn't have a state dinosaur, but its state fossil is Pterotrigonia thoracica, a type of bivalve. If you count birds as a subgroup of dinosaurs, then the state bird is a state dinosaur, and Tennessee's state bird is the bobwhite quail.
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There are not any coupons I know of that will give your friend free groceries on an ongoing basis. You should encourage your friend to apply for SNAP. This is the name for food stamps program so he had can get the nutritious feed he needs.
In general, a Mouse has 5 pairs of nipples (total of 10 individually). They are: 1. pars cervicalis 2. pars thoracica cranialis 3. pars thoracica caudalis 4. pars abdominalis 5. pars inguinalis
Many species of birds live in the tropical rain forests all aound the world. Some of them are: South America: Quetzal, macaw, hummingbirds, eagles, ovenbirds, antbirds, flycatchers, puff-birds, toucans, honey-creepers, wild turkeys etc. Australia: Cassowary, brolga, emerald dove, orange-footed scrubfowl, Australian brush-turkey, sarus crane, fruit dove, topknot pigeon, Australian king parrot, lesser sooty owl, barred cuckoo-shrike, golden whistler, etc. South East Asia: Tree swifts, fairy bluebirds, fantails, whistlers, flowerpeckers, wood swallows, jungle crows, jungle fowls etc. West Africa: Congo peafowl, African Gray Parrot, toucans, macaws etc.