Spiriferellina cf. insculpta (Phillips, 1836)

Sun, Yuanlin & Baliński, Andrzej, 2011, Silicified Mississippian brachiopods from Muhua, southern China: Rhynchonellides, athyridides, spiriferides, spiriferinides, and terebratulides, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 56 (4), pp. 793-842 : 835-836

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2010.0106

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BB9544-FF84-A657-FCEC-F8679C6CF91A

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Spiriferellina cf. insculpta (Phillips, 1836)
status

 

Spiriferellina cf. insculpta (Phillips, 1836)

Figs. 7B View Fig , 33 View Fig .

Material.—One complete and 2 damaged ventral valves, and one slightly incomplete dorsal valve from the sample MH2. One damaged dorsal valve and a fragment of ventral valve from the sample GB.

Description.—The single complete ventral valve is 7 mm long, 12 mm wide, and 6.4 mm thick, semicircular in outline, slightly subpyramidal in shape, with apsacline, high, almost flat, transversely striated triangular interarea; lateral margins of the interarea slightly rounded; cardinal extremities slightly rounded, hinge line almost equal the greatest width of the valve; sulcus very deep, rounded, bounded by a pair of very high, subangular plicae; delthyrium open, delthyrial angle 24 °.

Dorsal valve semicircular in outline, with a very high, an−

http://dx.doi.org/10.4202/app.2010.0106

gular fold and tree high, angular plicae on each flank, diminishing in size rapidly toward lateral extremities; interarea low, almost linear, slightly concave, rectangular.

Ventral interior with short dental adminicula joining the valve floor in the umbonal region along the bottom of interspaces next to the sulcus−bounding plicae, continuing anteriorly as sharp lamellae decreasing gradually in height and becoming distally barely strong dental ridges; median septum thin, sharp, increasing in height anteriorly and reaching about the mid−valve.

Interior of dorsal valve with strong inner socket ridges diverging at 110 °; inner socket ridges and crural bases forming slightly concave plates, elevated above valve floor, and converging with the base of ctenophoridium; ctenophoridium distinct, subtriangular in dorsal view; adductor scars bordered by distinct ridges running more or less radially along the bottom of the fold−bounding interspaces.

Shell strongly plicate, 6 plicae on each of the two figured ventral valves ( Fig. 33A, D View Fig ), and 3 and 7 (including fold) on two dorsal valves, respectively ( Fig. 33B, C View Fig ). On a single dorsal valve two plicae bifurcate near the anterior margin ( Fig. 33C View Fig 1 View Fig ) but the bifurcation takes place anterior to a marked arrest of growth caused probably by some serious disturbance during the life of the animal. Concentric growth lamellae prominent, imbricate, with frequency of about 4 per mm; pustules nor observed, shell substance distinctly punctate.

Remarks.—The specimens from Muhua show great resemblance to Spiriferellina insculpta (Phillips, 1836) and Spiriferellina octoplicata (Sowerby, 1827) , both from the Lower Carboniferous of England and Ireland. The latter species are also morphologically similar to each other differing slightly mainly in the general shell outline and character of the shell plication ( North 1920; Brunton 1984; Bassett and Bryant 2006). Most of our specimens are very close to S. insculpta having the same number and shape of radial plicae ( Fig. 33A, B, D View Fig ). Only one slightly incomplete dorsal valve from Muhua shown on Figure 33C View Fig has at least 7 plicae thus resembling the condition of S. octoplicata . Unfortunately, the insufficient material does not allow for a satisfactory taxonomic comparison.

Stratigraphic and geographic range.— Spiriferellina insculpta is known from the Tournaisian–Viséan of the British Isles, Belgium, and doubtfully from the Moscow Basin of Russia (see Brunton 1984). Here we report similar form Tournaisian of Muhua, southern China.

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