1928 Cravenoceras Bisat: 132.
1934 Cravenoceras.- Schindewolf: 161.
1934 Cravenoceras.- Schmidt: 455.
1937 Cravenoceras.- Plummer & Scott:259.
1938 Cravenoceras.- Librovich: 58, 92.
1941 Cravenoceras.- Librovich: 148.
1948 Cravenoceras.- Miller & Youngquist: 655.
1949 Cravenoceras.- Youngquist: 290.
1957 Cravenoceras.- Treatise: L56.
1958 Tympanoceras.- Ruzhencev: 295.
1960 Cravenoceras.- Horn: 332.
1960 Cravenoceras.- Ruzhentsev: 212.
1962 Cravenoceras.- Kullmann: 78.
1962 Cravenoceras.- Osnovy: 375.
1962 Cravenoceras.- Yates: 388.
1965 Cravenoceras.- Gordon: 204.
1971 Cravenoceras.- Ruzhencev & Bogoslovskaya: 253.
pt. 1975 Cravenoceras.-Nassichuk: 81.
1999 Cravenoceras.-Saunders & Work: 128.
2002 Cravenoceras.-Korn & Tilsley: 116.

Type species: Homoceras malhamense Bisat, 1924, p. 106 [OD].

A: Conch form thick-discoidal to globose, widely to moderately umbilicate, in young stages mostly extremely evolute.
B: Sculpture consisting of transverse lamellae, which are more or less straight on the flanks, but form a shallow
ventral sinus.
F: Longitudinal lirae mostly absent or very faint, sometimes restricted to umbilical shoulder.
D: Constrictions weak or absent. Ventral lobe narrow, with relatively low median saddle. Relation of lobe
width/height [wl/hl] about 0.5; range: 0.46-0.58, height of median saddle in ventral lobe [saddle height/lobe
height, hs/hl] about 0.4; range 0.29-0.43.

[Cravenoceras is probably a senior synonym of Emstites (see in Emstites Korn). It is closely related and seems to be transitional to glaphyritid genera, e.g. Syngastrioceras, Glaphyrites].