Watsonella crosbyi Grabau, 1900
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00289.2016 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AD87A8-FFBB-6D06-FF06-FA21632084C1 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Watsonella crosbyi Grabau, 1900 |
status |
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Watsonella crosbyi Grabau, 1900 View in CoL
Fig. 16 View Fig .
Material.—Ten phosphatic internal moulds (and fragments), including figured SMNH Mo160433, 182235–182239, from samples 1/29.2, 1/29.5, 1/6 (section 1, Fig. 4 View Fig ), K8 (section 3, Fig. 3), and M424/10 (section M424); Medvezhya and Kugda-Yuryakh formations, western Anabar Uplift, Siberian Platform, Russia. Correlated with the Fortunian–Cambrian Stage 2 transitional beds and lower part of Cambrian Stage 2.
→ Fig. 15. Mollusc Anabarella plana Vostokova, 1962 , internal moulds, from early Cambrian Emyaksin Formation, Bol’shaya Kuonamka River, eastern Anabar Uplift, Siberia, Russia; sample 5a/1.2 from section 96-5a. A–I. SMNH Mo182226–182234, respectively. A 1 –D 1, E, F 1, G 1, H, I, lateral; A 2, B 4, C 3, D 2, F 2, upper; A 4, B 2, C 2, D 3, F 3, G 2, subapical; A 3, G 3, apertural views. Scale bar 500 μm (A 1) and 1 mm (A 2 –A 4, B–I).
Description.—Bilaterally symmetrical, laterally compressed shell, up 4 mm long. Aperture is very elongate oval in outline, with length/width ratio of ca. 3 in planar view, curved in sagittal plane. Apex blunt evenly expands into the main part of the shell. Subapical side very short. Supra-apical side (dorsum) long, broadly convex in lateral view, flattened to gently depressed in the middle. Subapical and supra-apical margins of aperture arched towards dorsum. Inner surface of the shell (replicated on internal moulds) smooth, with irregularly spaced, gentle comarginal folds.
Remarks.—The outline and width of these internal moulds vary from broad ( Fig. 16E View Fig ) to relatively slim with a slightly more pronounced apex ( Fig. 16A, B View Fig ). The variation agrees well with that observed by Li et al. (2011) and Devaere et al. (2013) and interpreted as intraspecific, but the presence of different species or sub-species of Watsonella cannot be excluded. A medial furrow interpreted as a reflection of a hinge-like structure was observed in the apical part of a single internal mould ( Dzik 1994: fig. 12G), but remains, however, questionable, because numerous other specimens from various localities display undivided juvenile shells (Vendrasco et al. 2011a, b; Li et al. 2011; Devaere et al. 2013). Its presence likely can only be confidently assessed in specimens with preserved conchs (e.g., Steiner et al. 2007: fig. 6A, D). A medial furrow along the dorsal surface of the shell was likely present (Landing et al. 1989: fig. 5.20; Steiner et al. 2007: fig. 6D; Li et al. 2011) and is reflected on the available internal moulds by a variably developed longitudinal dorsal depression ( Fig. 16A View Fig 3, B 3). The shell microstructure of Watsonella is similar to that in Anabarella plana (see Kouchinsky 1999 and Watsonella -like forms of A. plana in Fig. 14).
Watsonella crosbyi ( Grabau, 1900) View in CoL occurs in the lower Emyaksin (Kengede River; Bokova 1992: 17, 46, fig. 14), Medvezhya and Kugda-Yuryakh formations of the Anabar Uplift, upper Kessyusa Group of the Olenyok Uplift, lower Pestrotsvet Formation of the Lena-Aldan and Uchur-Maya regions of the SE Siberian Platform, and lower Krasny Porog (Krasnoporog) Formation on the NW margin of the Siberian Platform ( Bokova 1992; Khomentovsky and Karlova 1993, 2005; Rowland et al. 1998; Kouchinsky 1999; Sipin 2001; and herein). Isotopic data from the Kengede section are unavailable, but the lower Emyaksin Formation at Bol’shaya Kuonamka, eastern flank of the Anabar Uplift, contains prominent positive excursions (see Kouchinsky et al. 2001 and Fig. 2 View Fig herein) thought to be characteristic of Cambrian Stage 2 around the world. Herein, Watsonella crosbyi View in CoL is reported from the middle Medvezhya Formation of the Ary-Mas-Yuryakh section (section 1 this report; see also Landing and Kouchinsky 2016), just below the positive peak of the excursion Iʹ (Knoll et al. 1995a, b; Kaufman et al. 1996).
As in Siberia, Watsonella crosbyi View in CoL is used as an index fossil in western Mongolia. It is known to occur there in the upper Bayan-Gol Formation, near the basal part of the δ 13 Ccarb excursion F ( Brasier et al. 1996). However, the species has a very limited stratigraphic and geographic distribution in western Mongolia ( Esakova and Zhegallo 1996), which limits its use as an index fossil ( Demidenko and Parkhaev 2014). A probably significantly truncated range is also known from the Heraultia Limestone View in CoL , France, where a Watsonella crosbyi View in CoL ‒ Oelandiella korobkovi Interval Zone View in CoL was defined and referred to Cambrian Stage 2 ( Devaere et al. 2013). Although Watsonella crosbyi View in CoL first occurs in significantly younger strata than those with the earliest shelly molluscs in South China, Siberia, and western Mongolia, the Watsonella crosbyi Zone View in CoL of the Chapel Island Formation on eastern Newfoundland and New Brunswick contains the earliest molluscs in Avalonia, with forms such as W. crosbyi View in CoL , Aldanella attleborensis (Shaler and Foerste, 1888) View in CoL , and Helcionella sp. ( Bengtson and Fletcher 1983; Landing et al. 1989, 1998, 2013; Kouchinsky et al. 2012).
Stratigraphic and geographic range.— Probably the uppermost Fortunian (depending on stratigraphic correlation) and Cambrian Stage 2 of Siberia, Altai-Sayan Folded area, western Mongolia, East Gondwana (South China, Australia), West Gondwana (Armorican France) and Avalonia (Massachusetts, Cape Breton Island, eastern Newfoundland). The species reportedly ranges into the lower part of Cambrian Stage 3 in Avalonia (Landing et al. 1989, 2013) and South Australia ( Gravestock et al. 2001; but Jacquet et al. 2016).
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Watsonella crosbyi Grabau, 1900
Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Landing, Ed, Steiner, Michael, Vendrasco, Michael & Ziegler, Karen 2017 |
Watsonella crosbyi Zone
Assemblage Zone Li and Chen 1992 |
W. crosbyi
Assemblage Zone Li and Chen 1992 |