Ceratoconus striatus Chen and Zhang, 1980
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00289.2016 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AD87A8-FFB7-6D0B-FCCF-FDD3622A85B6 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Ceratoconus striatus Chen and Zhang, 1980 |
status |
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Ceratoconus striatus Chen and Zhang, 1980 View in CoL
Figs. 26, 27.
Material.—About 150 phosphatic internal moulds, including figured SMNH Mo182297–182302, from samples 1/39.3, 1/46 (section 1, Fig. 4 View Fig ), 3/12, 3/12.2, and K2/25 (section 3, Fig. 3), Medvezhya Formation, western flanks of the Anabar Uplift and 20 phosphatic internal moulds, including figured SMNH Mo182303–182306, from samples B-438 and 769, lower Emyaksin Formation, Kengede River, southern flank of the Anabar Uplift, Siberian Platform, Russia. Correlated with the upper Fortunian Stage.
Description.—Long, narrow, conical, ceratoconic shell curved up to 1/4 whorl in one plane with broad oval aperture. Apex conical with a blunt rounded tip. Protoconch not clearly separated. Inner shell surface (as replicated on internal moulds) is smooth or with low‒moderately high transverse folds. Aperture with subapical sinus ( Fig. 27A View Fig 2 View Fig ). Remarks.—These internal moulds are identical to those of Ceratoconus rusticus (Val’kov, 1987) and C. arcuatus Missarzhevsky, 1989 . Forms with larger and bulbous protoconch (see Ceratoconus aff. striatus below, Fig. 28 View Fig ) co-occur with those having more pointed apices (Figs. 26, 27). Both such forms were attributed to Ceratoconus striatus Chen and Zhang, 1980 , by Parkhaev in Rozanov et al. (2010: pl. 29: 7, 8). As recognized herein, C. striatus has more elongated internal moulds with more subdued transverse folds than specimens of C. striatus from South China. Ceratoconus aff. striatus more likely represents a separate species and can be distinguished by a wider and more rounded initial part (protoconch?) and a greater angle of shell expansion.
Stratigraphic and geographic range.— Upper Fortunian and Cambrian Stage 2 of Siberian Platform, South China, and western Mongolia.
SMNH |
Department of Paleozoology, Swedish Museum of Natural History |
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