Heliodiscus riedeli, Dumitrica, 2019

Dumitrica, Paulian, 2019, Cenozoic Spumellarian Radiolaria With Eccentric Microsphere, Acta Palaeontologica Romaniae 15 (1), pp. 39-60 : 52

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.35463/j.apr.2019.01.04

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:57C54916-CC13-4BA1-BA82-2A99A822D9D1

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10520630

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1F21C405-C343-FF82-3D28-C9CDB0DDA14D

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Heliodiscus riedeli
status

sp. nov.

Heliodiscus riedeli nov. sp.

Figures 8b, e, f View Fig ; 9a View Fig

Description. Shell large, disc-shaped with a small double medullary shell and a wide cortical shell. Microsphere very small, eccentric in the outer medullary shell and connected to it through a few cylindrical beams of different length. Outer medullary shell spherical or slightly prunoid with wide circular or polygonal pores separated by thin intervening bars and included in the cavity of the cortical shell to which it is connected with the two faces of this shell by a bunch of very short rays. Cortical shell flat, very thin and perforated by numerous very small polygonal pores arranged either disorderly or, partly, radially. Periphery of disc armed with numerous threebladed, short, and pyramidal spines disposed in several planes.

Material. Eight specimens in sample PROA 96 P, 241- 243 cm, late middle Miocene .

Holotype. Figure 8b View Fig , coll. MGL 103559 View Materials .

Dimensions. Diameter of microsphere 17-19 μm, of outer medullary shell 47-54 μm, of cortical shell 241-295 μm.

Etymology. The species is named for William R. Riedel for his great contribution to the study of Cenozoic radiolarians. It is also in the sample provided by him that this species was found.

Remarks. This species differs from all the other species of this genus in having a large, completely flat disc-shaped cortical shell and many short pyramidal spines on periphery.

Range and occurrences. Late middle Miocene, central Pacific.

R

Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile

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