Chancelloria symmetrica, Li and Chen, 1992

Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Landing, Ed, Steiner, Michael, Vendrasco, Michael & Ziegler, Karen, 2017, Terreneuvian stratigraphy and faunas from the Anabar Uplift, Siberia, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 62 (2), pp. 311-440 : 384

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00289.2016

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AD87A8-FFD2-6D6E-FCB9-FD346226847E

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Chancelloria symmetrica
status

 

Chancelloria symmetrica Vasil’eva, 1985

Fig. 47A, B, F View Fig .

Material.—Single 7+1 sclerite from sample 5a/18.5; single 8+1 and three 6–7+1 sclerites from 5a/34.5; 7+1, 8+1 and 9+1 sclerites from 5a/34.75 (section 96-5a, Fig. 2 View Fig ); single 7+1 sclerites from samples 1/6 (section 1, Fig. 4 View Fig ) and K2, as well as several disarticulated sclerites from K2/60 (section 3, Fig. 3), including figured SMNH X5828, 5829, and 5833, from the Kugda-Yuryakh and Emyaksin formations, Anabar Uplift, Siberia, Russia. Correlated with Cambrian Stage 2.

Description.—Articulated sclerites consist of 6–8 lateral rays gently curved away from the plane of the basal facet and the one central ray ( Fig. 47A, F View Fig ). The rays are enlarged at their bases. Base of the central ray 1.5‒2.0 times greater in diameter than the lateral ray bases. Basal facet of each ray flattened, covered with a polygonal network ( Fig. 47B View Fig ), and has a central foramen. Facets of the rays lie on a shared, flattened basal surface.

Remarks.— Chancelloria symmetrica was described by Vasil’eva (1985) from the Cambrian Stage 2 equivalent beds of the Siberian Platform. Conspecific forms are reported from western Mongolia, Australia, and South China (Parkhaev and Demidenko 2010: 901), although the assignment of sclerites from South China to C. symmetrica by Parkhaev and Demidenko (2010) was questioned by Moore et al. (2014). Chancelloria cf. eros Walcott, 1920 , described from the Emyaksin Formation (Kouchinsky et al. 2015a), is different from C. symmetrica in having relatively longer, slim rays which are much less inflated at their bases. A polygonal microstructure on the basal facet of one articulated sclerite ( Fig. 47B View Fig ) is similar to the botryoidal microstructure observed in other chancelloriid sclerites (see Bengtson et al. 1990; Moore et al. 2014).

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF