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Tabulophyllum is an extinct genus of horn coral belonging to the order and family . Specimens have been found in Devonian beds in Australia North America, and most other major areas of Devonian outcrops. The genus was highly adaptable to a variety of substrates, including muddy, sandy, and firm substrates. The genus had a low-magnesium calcite skeleton and may have flourished in times of "calcite seas". There is evidence from fossil reefs in the Onate Formation of New Mexico, US, that the genus favored the receptaculitid Sphaerospongia as a firm substrate for growth.

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  • Tabulophyllum (en)
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  • Tabulophyllum is an extinct genus of horn coral belonging to the order and family . Specimens have been found in Devonian beds in Australia North America, and most other major areas of Devonian outcrops. The genus was highly adaptable to a variety of substrates, including muddy, sandy, and firm substrates. The genus had a low-magnesium calcite skeleton and may have flourished in times of "calcite seas". There is evidence from fossil reefs in the Onate Formation of New Mexico, US, that the genus favored the receptaculitid Sphaerospongia as a firm substrate for growth. (en)
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  • Fenton and Fenton 1924 (en)
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  • Tabulophyllum (en)
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  • Tabulophyllum is an extinct genus of horn coral belonging to the order and family . Specimens have been found in Devonian beds in Australia North America, and most other major areas of Devonian outcrops. The genus was highly adaptable to a variety of substrates, including muddy, sandy, and firm substrates. The genus had a low-magnesium calcite skeleton and may have flourished in times of "calcite seas". There is evidence from fossil reefs in the Onate Formation of New Mexico, US, that the genus favored the receptaculitid Sphaerospongia as a firm substrate for growth. (en)
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