Orthoceratidae, from Ancient Greek ὀρθός (orthós), meaning "straight", and κέρας (kéras), meaning "horn", is an extinct family of actively mobile carnivorous cephalopods, subclass Nautiloidea, that lived in what would be North America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Australia from the Ordovician through Triassic from 490—203.7 mya, existing for approximately .
Orthoceratidae, from Ancient Greek ὀρθός (orthós), meaning "straight", and κέρας (kéras), meaning "horn", is an extinct family of actively mobile carnivorous cephalopods, subclass Nautiloidea, that lived in what would be North America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Australia from the Ordovician through Triassic from 490—203.7 mya, existing for approximately .
==Taxonomy== Orthoceratidae was named by McCoy (1844) and assigned to the Orthocerida by Teichert and Miller (1939) (as Orthocerotidae), to the Michelinoceratida by Flower (1962), and to the Orthocerataceae by Sweet (1964). It has been subsequently included in the Orthocerataceae by Evans (1994) and in the Orthocerida by Evans (2005) and by Kröger et al. (2007). Flower showed in 1962 that Orthocerotidae as used by Teichert and Miller (1939) is synonymous with Orthoceratidae McCoy (1884).
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).