Mianeuretus

There are two fossil species in this genus, Mianeuretus mirabilis, known from Florissant shale (Oligocene) in the United Sates and the other species Mianeuretus eocenicus from Middle Eocene (Lutetian) Green River Formation, Colorado, USA. At this time Mianeuretus is placed within the Aneuretinae.

Identification
Female. - Moderate size; head distinctly longer than broad, rounded, slightly narrowed anteriorly; sides convex; eyes large, ocelli present; mandibles triangular, with blunt teeth; antennae slender, with eleven subequal segments; thorax about as broad as the head; petiole much longer than broad, surmounted posteriorly by a small node; gaster of moderate size. (Venation unknown)

Distribution
One specimen from Florissant shales of the United States (Oligocene) and the other Eocene from the Green River Formation, Colorado in the United States.

Castes
queen, worker

Nomenclature

 * † MIANEURETUS [Aneuretinae]
 * †Mianeuretus Carpenter, 1930: 38. Type-species: †Mianeuretus mirabilis, by original designation.

Additional References

 * Carpenter, F. M. 1930. The fossil ants of North America. Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. 70: 1-66


 * Dlussky, G. M.; Rasnitsyn, A. P. 2003 [2002]. Ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) of Formation Green River and some other Middle Eocene deposits of North America. Russ. Entomol. J. 11(4): 411-436


 * Ward, P.S., Brady, S.G., Fisher, B.L. & Schultz, T.R. 2010. Phylogeny and biogeography of Dolichoderinae ants: effects of data partitioning and relict taxa on historical inference. Systematic Biology 59: 342-362