Ascheria

Kaim, Andrzej, Jenkins, Robert G., Tanabe, Kazushige & Kiel, Steffen, 2014, Mollusks from late Mesozoic seep deposits, chiefly in California, Zootaxa 3861 (5), pp. 401-440 : 417

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3861.5.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E62DB6C3-0C5F-4898-99C4-1BEC70DD1734

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6127243

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F4372E-FFF6-685E-FF34-01C9FD83FCB6

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Ascheria
status

gen. nov.

Ascheria ? sp.

( Fig. 7A–D View FIGURE 7. A – D )

Description. Large high-spired shell with remnants of opisthocline axial ribs and/or growth lines. Spiral lirae bestdeveloped on whorl/base demarcation and base. Subsutural constriction developing on the adult portion of the shell. Juvenile whorls unknown unless specimens of Kugler et al. (1994) and Gill et al. (2005) belong to the same species. Protoconch unknown. Aperture drop-shaped.

Material and occurrence. Four specimens from Joes River Formation (probably Eocene-Miocene), Barbados collected by Peter Jung. Three specimens (NMB-H 20154, 20155, 20158) from Loc. 10039 (Joes River, western branch of Spa River, between Spa and Richmond Ridge under oceanic cliff. Joes River mudflow. Marlstone lenses with fossils in pebbly clays. 349 E to Spa windmill) and one specimen (NMB-H 20162) from Loc. 10070 (Joes River mudflows in branches of River S of Bissex Hill).

Remarks. Additional specimens which may belong to this species are illustrated by Kugler et al. (1984) and Gill et al. (2005) as “ Diastoma sp.” and "Cerithid indet." ( Kugler et al. 1984), and as “ Abyssochryssos sp.” and “zygopleurid sp. B” ( Gill et al. 2005). The specimens we examined are only fragmentary and a study of the entire material available from Barbados would be necessary for a more accurate taxonomic assessment. The gross morphology of all specimens (especially NMB-H 20154, 20155, 20158) is reminiscent of Abyssomelania but the most characteristic feature of Abyssomelania , the abyssomelanid riblets is absent in the specimens from Barbados. Nevertheless it is possible that the specimen from locality 10070 (NMB-H 20162) belongs to Ascheria ( Fig. 7D View FIGURE 7. A – D ) due to the presence of a subsutural constriction, while the specimens NMB-H 20154, 20155, and 20158 from locality 10039 belong to Abyssomelania .

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