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Eorpa (genus) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Eorpa (genus)
Eorpidae is a small family of extinct insects in the scorpionfly order, Mecoptera, which contains a single genus, ''Eorpa''. Three Eocene age species found in Western North America have been placed into the genus: ''E. elverumi'', ''E. jurgeni'', and ''E. ypsipeda''. ==History and classification== When described, Eorpidae was identified from a series of over thirty-five compression fossils in silty yellow to grayish shales recovered from southern fossil sites of the Ypresian age Okanagan highlands in Washington state and British Columbia. Both the McAbee Fossil Beds near Cache Creek, BC and the Falklands site, near Falkland, BC have sediments belonging to the Kamloops group shales. The Quilchena site outcrop near Quilchena, BC exposes shale of the Coldwater Formation, also a member formation of the Kamloops group. The southernmost fossils are from several outcrops of the Klondike Mountain Formation in Republic, Washington.〔 The family, genus, and species were first described by paleoentomologists S. Bruce Archibald, Rolf Mathews, and David Greenwood with their 2013 type description being published in the natural sciences journal ''Journal of Paleontology''.〔 The family name is a combination of the genus name ''Eorpa'' and -"idae" following International Code of Zoological Nomenclature naming articles. The genus name is a combination of Eos, the Greek mythology goddess of dawn, a reference to the Eocene and "-orpa", a common suffix for mecopterans. The specific epithet ''elverumi'' is a patronym honoring John Elverum, finder of the type specimen. Similarly ''jurgeni'' is a patronym recognizing Jurgen Mathewes for years of collecting and research assistance at Quilchena. The type species ''E. ypsipeda'' has a specific epithet derived from the Greek word ''ypsipeda'' meaning "highlands", referring to the upland habitat of the family.〔 ''E. elverumi'' was described from two fossil wings, the holotype SRUI 08-07-07 a&b and the paratype SRUI 08-02-01 a&b, both found in the Klondike Mountain formation. The fossils are preserved in the collections of the Stonerose Interpretive Center in Republic Washington. ''E. jurgeni'' was known from only the holotype wing, Q-0096, recovered from Quilchena and housed at Simon Fraser University. Unlike the other two species, ''E. ypsipeda'' was described from a series of over 35 fossils, both complete insects and isolated wings. All the full insect specimens were from the McAbee fossil site, while the wings are from McAbee and possibly Republic and the Falklands site. The specimens are housed at a number of different institutions including the Royal Tyrell Museum and the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture.〔
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