[Cephalaspideans have a shield-shaped head (cephalic shield) which is often used to plow through the substrate. Nearly all also have an internal or external shell, though one pelagic family has no shell. None have rhinophores, though some have rolled extensions of mantle on the head that may look somewhat like rhinophores.]
Taken primarily from Kozloff, 1987, 1996 p. 237 (Copyright 1987, 1996, University of Washington Press. Used in this web page by permission of University of Washington Press)
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| Lower taxonomic level | Main Page | Alphabetic Index | Systematic Index | Glossary |
| 1a | Shell either not visible externally or too small to accommodate the animal when it retracts | 2 |
| 1b | Shell large enough tot accommodate the animal when it retracts | 7 |
| 2a | Shell visible externally, but partly covered by the mantle | 3 |
| 2b | Shell not visible externally | 4 |
| 3a | Width of the aperture, at the level where the shell is broadest, slightly more than one-third the width of the shell; height up to about 2 cm | Haminoea vesicula |
| 3b | Width of the aperture, at the level where the shell is broadest, about two-thirds the width of the shell; height up to about 1.5 cm | Haminoea virescens |
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