Palaeodawsonocerina, Kroger & Isakar, 2006
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2013.41 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A2F1B9ED-870A-466E-B35E-BD5DA782476E |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3815098 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AD4D9054-CD47-6A42-F06D-432DFC63F873 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina (2020-05-07 19:54:00, last updated by Valdenar 2025-03-03 12:23:23) |
scientific name |
Palaeodawsonocerina |
status |
|
Palaeodawsonocerina ? nicolletoides sp. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:4E1D7CA7-028A-4174-94DF-D86B525B5F94
Figs 12 View Fig D-E, 18B
Diagnosis
Slender, large cyrtocones with a slightly compressed conch cross section and a pronounced annulation; prosiphuncular conch margin wider and more flattened than antisiphuncular margin in cross section; adult conch diameter ca. 30 mm; annuli relatively wide, ca. 4 per distance equal to conch diameter, ridges of annuli sharp and narrow, grooves wider and more rounded; conch surface ornamented with fine longitudinal striae and faint, very shallow, rounded longitudinal ridges; siphuncle eccentric, lying on concave side of conch curvature, septal perforation ca. 0.14 of conch cross section.
Etymology
The name refers to Orthoceras nicolleti Clarke, 1897 , which is very similar to Palaeodawsonocerina ? nicolletoides sp. nov. However, this species differs from O. nicoletti in having a less centrally positioned siphuncle and a more circular conch cross section.
Type material
Holotype
PMU 26727 .
Paratype
One paratype: PMU 26728 from Kallholn, Siljan District, Sweden; Boda Limestone, Boda Core Member, late Katian, Late Ordovician.
Type locality and horizon
Kallholn, Siljan District, Sweden, Boda Limestone, Boda Core Member, late Katian, Ordovician.
Description
Specimen PMU 26728 is a 105 mm long fragment of a nearly complete curved body chamber, with a diameter that increases from 28 to 32 mm (angle of expansion 2°; Fig. 12 View Fig D-E). The conch cross section is nearly circular at the base of the body chamber and slightly compressed at the aperture. The shell is strongly annulate, with a distance between annuli that increases adorally from 7 mm (0.24 of corresponding conch diameter) to 10 mm (0.31 of corresponding conch cross section). The second most adoral of the ridges is significantly lower in amplitude. Generally the ridges of the annuli are sharper than the valleys, which are broadly rounded. The annuli are slightly oblique, inclined adorally on the concave side of the conch curvature.
The holotype (PMU 26727), is a small piece of phragmocone 28 mm in diameter. The only preserved septum of this specimen is shallow convex (height of curvature 6 mm, 0.21 of conch diameter). The conch cross section is not perfectly circular, but rounded triangular with a pointed antisiphuncular and a broad prosiphuncular side. The septal perforation is 4 mm wide and eccentrically positioned, with a distance of 10 mm from the conch margin (SPR 0.36) on the concave side of the conch curvature. The shell is thin, 0.5 mm in the grooves of the annulation and thickens toward the ridges. The shell surface is ornamented with very fine longitudinal striae (ca. 10 per one millimeter), and very shallow, rounded, inconspicuous longitudinal ridges ( Fig. 18B View Fig ).
Remarks
The generic assignment of this species is uncertain because only fragments of the mature body chamber are known and internal details are a matter of speculation. However, because the conspicuous ornamentation is characteristic of other species of Palaeodawsonocerina , the species is provisionally assigned to that genus.
Comparison
The specimens described above are nearly identical to Orthoceras nicolleti from the Platteville Formation, Sandbian-early Katian of Wisconsin ( Foerste 1932) with respect to the wide, pronounced annulation and the curvature of the conch. The Platteville specimen is poorly known, as no details of the conch surface are preserved and this is the only known specimen. It differs from Palaeodawsonocerina ? nicolletoides sp. nov. in its larger size, central siphuncle and nearly circular conch cross section.
Teichert (1930) assigned a specimen from the Pirgu Regional Stage of Estonia to Syproceras textumaraneum ( Roemer, 1861) which can be compared with Orthoceras nicolleti and Palaeodawsonocerina ? nicolletoides sp. nov. with regard to its relatively large adult size, curved body chamber and distant annulations. The ornamentation of this specimen is not preserved, casting a degree of uncertainty on Teichert’s (1930) assignment to Spyroceras textumaraneum . The specimen of Teichert (1930) differs from Palaeodawsonocerina ? nicolletoides sp. nov. in having a narrower and shallower annulation and a larger adult size.
Balashov (1975: pl. 1, figs 3-6) figured several annulated and longitudinally striated orthocerids under the name Gorbyoceras duncanae Flower, 1946 . However, conch shape, ornamentation and internal characters indicate that these specimens are better assigned to Palaeodawsonocerina . The ornamentation, annulation and general shell shape of the specimen figured in Balashov (1975: pl. 1, figs 7) is similar to Palaeodawsonocerina ? nicolletoides sp. nov., but a direct comparison based on the incomplete material is not possible.
Stratigraphic and geographic range
Boda Limestone, Siljan District, Sweden; late Katian, Ordovician.
Balashov E. G. 1975. Cefalopody molodovskogo i kitayogorodskogo gorizontov Podolii. Voprosy Paleontologii 7: 63 - 101.
Flower R. H. 1946. Ordovician cephalopods from the Cincinnati region. Part 1. Bulletins of American Paleontology 26 (116): 3 - 547.
Foerste A. F. 1932. Black River and other cephalopods from Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Ontario (Part 1). Journal of the Scientific Laboratories of Denison University 27: 47 - 136.
Roemer C. F. 1861. Die fossile Fauna der silurischen Diluvial-Geschiebe von Sadewitz bei Oels in Nieder-Schlsien. Breslau.
Teichert C. 1930. Die Cephalopoden-Fauna der Lyckholm-Stufe des Ostbaltikums. Palaontologische Zeitschrift 12: 264 - 312.
Fig. 12. Annelate Orthocerida of the Boda Limestone. A. Palaeodawsonocerina senckenbergi (Teichert, 1930), PMU 26718, Kallholn. B-C. Striatocycloceras isbergi sp. nov., Osmundsberget. B. PMU 26660, holotype, Osmundberget. C. PMU 26664. D-E. Palaeodawsonocerina? nicolletoides sp. nov., PMU 26728, Kallholn. D. Adapical view. E. Lateral view. Scale A-C = 10 mm; D-E = 10 mm.
Fig. 18. Shell ornamentation of selected Cephalopoda of the Boda Formation. A. Order, gen. et sp. indet., PMU 26950, Kallholn, lateral view. B. Palaeodawsonocerina? nicolletoides sp. nov., PMU 26727, holotype, Kallholn. C. Palaeodawsonocerina senckenbergi (Teichert, 1930), PMU 26718, Kallholn. D. Geisonoceras wegelini (Angelin in Angelin & Lindström, 1880) comb. nov., PMU 26745, Unskarsheden. E. Pleurorthoceras osmundsbergense sp. nov., NRM-PZ Mo 150126, holotype, Osmundsberget. F. Warburgoceras longitudinale (Angelin in Angelin & Lindström, 1880) comb. nov., NRM-PZ Mo 154065, Unskarsheden. G. Redpathoceras depressum sp. nov., PMU 26931, Kallholn. Scale bar = 5 mm for all figures.
PMU |
Paleontological Museum of Uppsala |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
SubOrder |
Orthoceratina |
Family |
1 (by carolina, 2020-05-07 19:54:00)
2 (by ExternalLinkService, 2020-05-07 20:06:13)
3 (by ExternalLinkService, 2020-05-08 03:20:04)
4 (by ExternalLinkService, 2021-10-20 03:50:27)
5 (by ExternalLinkService, 2021-10-20 08:00:33)
6 (by ExternalLinkService, 2021-10-20 08:00:33)
7 (by ExternalLinkService, 2021-10-20 08:00:33)
8 (by plazi, 2023-10-31 12:58:47)
9 (by ExternalLinkService, 2023-11-01 11:42:24)
10 (by ExternalLinkService, 2024-11-26 00:39:01)
11 (by valdenar, 2025-02-20 18:44:42)