Two years later they revisited Palaeorehniinae, which no longer included the type genus, and as such they coined the replacement name Zeuneropterinae for the group in Gryllacrididae, which they moved Albertoilus to.
[3] The placement and composition of these groups were not addressed again until 2022 when S. Bruce Archibald, Jun-Jie Gu, and Rolf Mathewes described two new genera from Ypresian sites in British Columbia and Washington state.
They revived the original subfamily name Palaeorehniinae and emended it to Palaeorehniidae to reflect the re-inclusion of the type genus Palaeorehnia and the groups new family status.
The superfamily Stenopelmatoidea is noted to have long CuA+CuPaα, CuPaβ, CuPb, and 1A wing veins, a feature that only some palaeorehniids show, however others do not, with venation that is closer in aspect to Hagloidea appearing.
They are from the coeval upland temperate strata of the Klondike Mountain Formation in Washington state and the Coldwater Beds of South central British Columbia.