Aldanella cf. sibirica Parkhaev and Karlova, 2011
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00289.2016 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AD87A8-FFB3-6D0F-FF06-FE9A66FA856E |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Aldanella cf. sibirica Parkhaev and Karlova, 2011 |
status |
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Aldanella cf. sibirica Parkhaev and Karlova, 2011 View in CoL
Fig. 23.
Material.—About 80 internal moulds, including figured SMNH Mo182273–182283, from samples 5a/17.5, 5a/18.5, 5a/34.5, 5a/34.75 (section 96-5a, Fig.2 View Fig ), Emyaksin Formation from the Anabar Uplift, Siberian Platform, Russia. Correlated with Cambrian Stage 2.
Description.—Dextrally coiled shell up to 1.5 mm in diameter, up to 2.5 whorls, slowly expands, with moderately projecting spire. Apertural cross-section broadly oval. Upper and lower surfaces of the last whorl convex, lateral periphery gently rounded. Protoconch not separated on the internal molds. Inner shell surface (as replicated on internal moulds) smooth, initial part with rounded polygonal impressions 20–40 μm in diameter (Fig. 23H 1), apex gently pointed in some specimens.
Remarks.— Aldanella sibirica was first described by Parkhaev and Karlova (2011) from basal Erkeket Formation, section near Boroulakh on the Olenyok River, Olenyok Uplift of northern Siberian Platform, from the Dokidocyathus regularis Zone of the Tommotian Stage. The species shows variation in cross-sectional shape of the whorl, from narrower elliptical to broadly and irregularly oval. Such variation is consistent with morphological variability in internal moulds of Aldanella described by Landing (1988) from Avalonian North America. Internal moulds of A. sibirica are morphologically similar to those of A. attleborensis , as pointed out by Parkhaev and Karlova (2011: 1151), who mentioned rare “morphologically intermediate specimens”. A distinct spiral ornamentation of the shell exterior of A. sibirica (Parkhaev and Karlova 2011: pl. 11: 9) is absent in A. attleborensis ( Fig. 22A View Fig herein). In the latter species, a fine spiral striation occurs on the surface of internal moulds (Fig. 20B, D). Spiral ornamentation is not developed in our material of Aldanella cf. sibirica represented by internal moulds. These are similar to specimens of A. sibirica in their broad cross-section of the last whorl and are relatively smaller than A. attleborensis .
SMNH |
Department of Paleozoology, Swedish Museum of Natural History |
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