In this article, the topic of Similifaveoloolithus will be addressed from a multidisciplinary perspective, exploring its implications in different areas of daily life. The impact that Similifaveoloolithus has had on society will be analyzed, as well as the possible implications it could have in the future. Through an exhaustive review of the specialized literature, we will seek to provide a comprehensive and updated vision of this topic, in order to encourage reflection and debate around it. Different approaches and expert opinions will be presented, as well as concrete examples that illustrate the relevance and scope of Similifaveoloolithus today. This article aims to provide a complete and enriching overview of Similifaveoloolithus, giving readers the tools necessary to fully understand it.
| Similifaveoloolithus Temporal range: Aptian
~ | |
|---|---|
| Egg fossil classification | |
| Basic shell type: | †Dinosauroid-spherulitic |
| Oofamily: | †Similifaveoloolithidae |
| Oogenus: | †Similifaveoloolithus Wang et al., 2011 |
| Oospecies | |
| |
Similifaveoloolithus is an oogenus of fossil dinosaur egg from the Tiantai basin in Zhejiang Province, China. It is the sole known oospecies of the oofamily Similifaveoloolithidae.[1][2]
Similifaveoloolithus gongzhulingensis is known from nine specimens, including five complete fossil eggs; S. shuangtangensis is known from two complete fossil eggs of the Aptian Quantou Formation. The eggs are spherical and the pores are very numerous and irregular, with a honeycomb-like appearance. They are 11–12 cm in diameter. The shell is composed of two or three superimposed layers of shell units. S. gongzhulingensis is distinguished from S. shuangtangensis by its thicker eggshell.[1][2]
Similifaveoloolithus is the only described oospecies of Similifaveoloolithidae. S. shuangtangensis was originally described as a species of Dendroolithus in 2003.[3] However, Wang et al. (2011) considered it different enough from other ootaxa to be placed into a new oofamily and oogenus.[2] S. gongzhulingensis was originally described as a species of Dictyoolithus, but it was reclassified as a species of Similifaveoloolithus by Wang et al. (2013), because it shares much more in common with S. shuangtangensis than with the Dictyoolithids.[4][1]