Category
page 1Taxa named by Frank M. Carpenter
Meganeuropsis
Meganeuropsis, from Ancient Greek μέγας (mégas), meaning "large", νεῦρον (neûron), meaning "nerve", and ὄψις (ópsis), meaning "appearance", is an extinct genus of griffenfly, order Meganisoptera, known from the Early Permian Wellington Formation of North America, and represents the largest known insect of all time. Meganeuropsis existed during the Artinskian age of the Permian period, 290.1–283.5 mya. The genus includes two described species by Frank Morton Carpenter, fossil insect curator at the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University:

Eulithomyrmex
Eulithomyrmex is an extinct genus of ant in the formicid subfamily Agroecomyrmecinae. The genus contains two described species, Eulithomyrmex rugosus and Eulithomyrmex striatus. Eulithomyrmex is known from a group of Late Eocene fossils which were found in North America.
Aphaenogaster mayri
species of insect (fossil)
Aphaenogaster donisthorpei
species of insect (fossil)
Apteropanorpa tasmanica
species of scorpionflies
Iridomyrmex obscurans
species of insect
Iridomyrmex florissantius
species of insect
Dinopanorpidae
thumb|right|upright|Dinopanorpa megarche holotype
Dinopanorpidae is a small family of extinct insects in the order Mecoptera (scorpionflies) that contains two genera and seven species.