Bathypurpurinopsis stantoni, Kiel & Campbell & Elder & Little, 2008
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2008.0412 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DC9B54-FFEA-3377-FC85-472B7AD6CA10 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Bathypurpurinopsis stantoni |
status |
sp. nov. |
Bathypurpurinopsis stantoni sp. nov.
Fig. 8G–L View Fig .
Etymology: After Timothy William Stanton (1860–1953) who pioneered detailed taxonomic studies of invertebrate fossils from the Great Valley “white limestones”.
Type material: Holotype: CAS 70402 About CAS , large specimen with three whorls and a distinctive basal fold; paratypes: two specimens from the type locality ( UCMP 555102 View Materials , 555103 View Materials ) and four additional specimens from the type locality.
Type locality: Cold Fork of Cottonwood Creek , Tehama County, California, USA (site 1) .
Type horizon: Albian ( Lower Cretaceous ) seep carbonates, Lodoga Formation , Great Valley Group .
Diagnosis.—As for genus.
Description.—Shell moderately high spired, fusiform to littoriniform, with at least three whorls and incised suture, apical angle 38°; whorls convex, sculptured by fine, equally sized spiral threads, interspaces slightly wider than threads; growth lines fine, sinuous, slightly prosocyrt in upper half of whorl, slightly opisthocyrt in lower half; basal margin strongly constricted with a prominent siphonal fold below, growth lines on fold very strongly opisthocyrt, suggestive of deep siphonal notch; aperture broadly oval.
Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Known only from the type locality, Lodoga Formation, Great Valley Group; Albian (Lower Cretaceous).
Species of uncertain affinity
“ Cerithium ” sp.
Fig. 9A View Fig .
1895 Cerithium sp. ; Stanton 1895: 71.
Material.—The specimen described by Stanton ( USNM 23081) from Cold Fork of Cottonwood Creek (site 1). Description.—Two or three straight−sided whorls preserved, sculpture of nodular subsutural cord, another cord with two rows of tubercles near base; basal margin sharp, base flat, columellar and parietal lip of aperture smooth and strongly convex, suggestive of round aperture. Height 3.5 mm.
Discussion.—The described characters can be found in the Cretaceous campanilid Metacerithium (cf. Kiel 2006a) and in modern cerithiopsids (cf. Marshall 1978). The specimen is figured here because it was collected from presumed seep carbonates at Cold Fork of Cottonwood Creek ( Stanton 1895) and because Stanton did not figure it.
Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Albian (Lower Cretaceous), seep carbonates at Cold Fork of Cottonwood Creek, Lodoga Formation, Great Valley Group, California, USA.
Fusiform gastropod
Fig. 9B View Fig .
Material.— One specimen from Rocky Creek (site 7) .
Description.—Fusiform shell with two whorls preserved; suture incised, deep; whorls slightly convex, first whorl apparently smooth, on last whorl sinuous growth lines thickened to form sinuous, axial ribs; conspicuous ridge below suture that becomes tuberculate on last whorl where it is crossed by axial ribs; nine to ten spiral cords develop on lower third of last whorl, these cords are subequally spaced, interspaces as wide as cords, and with rounded crests; growth lines sinuous: opisthocyrt notch below suture, almost straight on whorl’s flanks, gently sloping backwards on lower third of whorl. The shell is 9 mm high.
Discussion.—At first glance, this specimen resembles some neogastropods from the Upper Cretaceous Ripley Formation of the US Gulf Coast plains, especially Ornopsis or Bellifusus (see Sohl 1964). However, the basal part of the specimen is not preserved or visible, hence the presence of a siphon is uncertain. The specimen may actually have just a siphonal notch in its aperture like cerithioids or littorinids. It could also be a Paskentana .
Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Known only from the Rocky Creek site, Valanginian (Lower Cretaceous), Crack Canyon formation, Great Valley Group, California, USA.
High spired gastropod
Fig. 9C View Fig .
Material.— Two specimens from W Berryessa (site 11).
Description.—Two−and−a−half whorls preserved; shell slen− der, high spired, whorls convex, suture finely incised; last whorl with nine spiral ribs that frequently show short, forward−pointing, hollow spines, ribs with rounded crests and subequally spaced, with interspaces about one to two times the width of ribs; growth lines narrowly spaced and strongly opisthocyrt.
Remarks.—This type of spiral sculpture without any obvious axial elements is quite unusual for cerithiform gastropods of this age. The poor preservation precludes a more precise classification of this species.
Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Known only from the W Berryessa, Early Cretaceous (probably Valanginian), Great Valley Group, California, USA.
USNM |
Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History |
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.
Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Genus |
Bathypurpurinopsis stantoni
Kiel, Steffen, Campbell, Kathleen A., Elder, William P. & Little, Crispin T. S. 2008 |
Cerithium sp.
Stanton, T. W. 1895: 71 |