Trionyx foveatus, Leidy., 1860
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.3233762 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BAEA64-B538-407E-7123-F700FC85DD1D |
treatment provided by |
Jeremy |
scientific name |
Trionyx foveatus, Leidy. |
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Plate I, figs. 1 and 2 View PLATE I .
Trionyx foveatus , Leidy. 1860. Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc. vol. xi, 148, pl. xi, figs. 1 View Fig and 2. View Fig
p. " " Lambe. 1902. Geol. Survey of Canada, Summary Report for 1901, p. 81, pls. I and II.
Trionyx foveatus was originally described by Leidy from small fragments of costal and sternal bones from the Judith River beds of Nebraska.
A carapace, from the Belly River series of the Red Deer river district, lacks only the nuchal plate, which unfortunately was missing.
This carapace ( fig. 1 View Fig ) is a little broader thau long, and is only slightly conA-ex. Seen from above, its anterior, posterior and lateral curves are flattened so as to make the outline subquadrangular. The eight pairs of costals are entire and there are six neural bones of which the anterior one is divided. Neural 1 is broader than long with convex sides, neural la is longer than broad, broadest near its posterior end and has concave sides. Neurals 2, 3 and 4 are six-sided, neural.5 is oblong, and neural 6, lying for the most part between the sixth costals, is shield-shaped, narrowing to a point behind. The seventh costals are suturally united at their inner ends, where they develop a breadth sufficient to separate the eighth costals from each other. These last are subtriangular in shape, with three convex sides. The nuchal plate was evidently small, as the lateral termination of the suture (c, in figure 1 View Fig ) between it and the first costal indicates a side extension not far past a point in advance of the mid-length of the first costal its lateral ends lie beneath the front border of the first costals and are not seen from above.
Small, shallow, rovinded depressions mark the surface of the neiirals and the inner ends of the costals. In the latter, as the distance from the neurals increases, the depressions gradually grow larger and more decided, becoming often reniform or oval, and frequently coalescing, until in the distal ends of the costals a few more or less continuous furrows are formed parallel to the outer margins of the plates. These furrows are a conspicuous featiire in the sculpture; they are not so well marked on the posterior margin of the carapace, but are well developed near the front edges of the first costals. In the neurals and inner halves of the costals there is a narrow, smooth strip, devoid oi sculpttire, bordering the sutures. The rib-heads are well developed.
Measurements. | |
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M. | |
Estimated length of carapace along median, line (6 6/10 inches)...., | 168 |
Length of carapace, along median line, from anterior edge of neural 1 to posterior margin | -163 |
Maximum breadth of carapace (8 4/10 inches) | '214: |
Length of first neural (1 + 1a) | -033 |
Length of second neural, | '023 |
Maximum breadth of second neural | 017 |
Thickness of fourth costal at centre near inner end | 005 |
Thickness of fourth cosial at centre near outer end | 005 |
Thickness of eighth costal at centre | 005 |
The hyosternal and hyposternal bones of this species, shown in fig. 2 View Fig , page 36, belong to individuals of larger size than the one represented by the carapace. The missing parts in fig. 2 View Fig are restored from a number of other specimens in the collection, of which no two are exactly alike. The sculpture differs considerably from that of the carapace and is shown on plate I, fig. 2 View PLATE I .
Belly River series. Red Deer river, 1901; also numerous costal bones and fragments of the carapace with separate neural bones as well as hyoplastra and hypoplastra and bones of the endoskeleton, 189*7, 1898 and 1901.
Dr. Gr. M. Dawson collected fragments of the carapace on Belly River, N. W. T. (Nos. 40 and 41) in 1881.
Trionyx planus ,* Owen and Bell, a British Lower Eocene species, described from the posterior half of the carapace, bears a strong general resemblance to T. foveatus as regards the sculpture, and also in the absence of the seventh and eighth neurals, accompanied by a similar ctirtailment of the sixth neural.
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The strong development of the seventh costals, found in the Red Deer river carapace, resulting in a reduction of the eighth pair of costals, is probably an irregularity of growth of no specific importance.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Trionyx foveatus, Leidy.
Lambe L. M. 1902 |
Trionyx foveatus
Leidy 1860 |