Aetholicopalla
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2012.0004 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C3891D-1579-C227-FFF5-FAC5CA6CFCC0 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Aetholicopalla |
status |
|
Aetholicopalla adnata Conway Morris in Bengtson et al., 1990
Fig. 73A View Fig
Material.— One specimen, SMNH X 4823 View Materials , from sample 7/70; uppermost Emyaksin Formation , Bol’shaya Kuonamka River ; Calodiscus-Erbiella Zone, lower Botoman Stage .
Description.—Phosphatised globule, ca. 1 mm in diameter. The surface is semi-spherical, densely covered with bumps, 20–40 μm wide, having open or broken-off tips. The other side is smooth and slightly concave, with rare bumps and a curved channel-like cast in the middle ( Fig. 73A View Fig 2 View Fig ).
Remarks.—While otherwise similar to Aetholicopalla adnata, the fossil does not display a double-wall or tubular pillars. The fossil also resembles single-walled Archaeooides in having a regular pustulose surface, but has a flattened portion typical of Aetholicopalla adnata and presumably related to an encrusting habit. Globules frequently occur in the samples, but their preservation prevents identification. Globules, 0.5–1 mm in size, with sphaerical or distorted wall often bearing tubercles occur in samples K7-6.3B, 6/16, 3/8, 3/11, 3/16.5, 3/23, 3/34, 3/40, 3/53.5, from the Emyaksin Formation of the Malaya Kuonamka and Bol’shaya Kuonamka rivers, ranging from the Dokidocyathus regularis Zone, Tommotian Stage to the Delgadella anabara Zone, Atdabanian Stage. Smaller globules of unknown affinity, 0.15–0.3 mm in size, of which deformation often produces a tri-lobate shape ( Fig. 73B View Fig ), occur in samples 3/29, 3/49, 3/50, 3/62.5, 6/59.3, K7-6.3B, 7/27.5, and 7/34.7 from the Tommotian and Atdabanian strata of the same localities.
Stratigraphic and geographic range.— Aetholicopalla adnata is also described from Cambrian Series 2 of the Montagne Noire, France ( Kerber 1988) and the Görlitz Syncline, eastern Germany ( Elicki and Schneider 1992; Elicki 1998), Australia ( Bengtson et al. 1990; Gravestock et al. 2001), Antarctica ( Wrona 2004), and from the Series 2–3 boundary interval of Sardinia ( Elicki and Pillola 2004).
SMNH |
Department of Paleozoology, Swedish Museum of Natural History |
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