Alvania, Risso, 1826

Hansen, Thomas, 2019, Gastropods from the Cretaceous-Palaeogene boundary in Denmark, Zootaxa 4654 (1), pp. 1-196 : 97

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4654.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CFD82CC0-3110-472E-972B-7ADC0C523A04

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5582814

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/BF18F633-A960-FF85-2B9C-C58BFC87F837

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Alvania
status

 

Alvania View in CoL sp. A

Figs 25V View FIGURE 25 , 26 View FIGURE 26 A–B

Material. MGUH 33163, MGUH 33164 and an external mould in the unofficially catalogued sample SR.1015 deposited at the Natural History Museum of Denmark.

Occurrence. Lithified top of the Maastrichtian Højerup Member, Tor Formation, at Rødvig and Højerup Church, Stevns Klint.

Description. Spire fairly low and wide. Protoconch low spired with smooth and relatively flattened whorls. Transition to teleoconch apparently rather gradual.

Teleoconch whorls moderately convex with periphery slightly adapical of transition to base. Suture narrow and moderately shallow. Transition to strongly convex base rather gradual. Aperture rounded abapically with strongly developed and smooth varix. Teleoconch sculpture consisting of around 10 strong and sharp-ridged, slightly opisthocyrt and opisthocline transverse ribs per half whorl; ribs fading out abapically at transition to base. Transverse ribs weak on first teleoconch whorl, crossed by weak spiral threads. Adapical suture bordered by beaded collar formed by stronger spiral rib delineated abapically by spiral furrow. Transition to weakly spirally ribbed base marked by another stronger spiral rib. Base covered by up to six or seven very weak spiral ribs, crossed adapically by nearly effaced continuations of transverse ribs.

Measurements. Most complete specimen, MGUH 33163, measures 1.6 mm in height and 1.3 mm in width, consisting of three whorls but lacking top of protoconch.

Remarks. Alvania sp.A resembles the Late Cretaceous Alvania costata ( Wade, 1926) and Alvania tallahatchiensis ( Sohl, 1960) from the U.S.A., but is readily recognized by the spiral rib bordering the base, the restricted spiral sculpture and the beaded spiral rib adapically on the whorl.

MGUH

Museum Geologicum Universitatis Hafniensis

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