Pustula Thomas, 1914

Carniti, Alessandro P., Porta, Giovanna Della, Banks, Vanessa J., Stephenson, Michael H. & Angiolini, Lucia, 2022, Brachiopod fauna from uppermost Visean (Mississippian) mud mounds in Derbyshire, UK, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 67 (4), pp. 865-915 : 895

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00972.2022

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/41708783-FFC9-FFA4-8C8B-C809FD7EF902

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Pustula Thomas, 1914
status

 

Genus Pustula Thomas, 1914 View in CoL View at ENA

Type species: Producta pustulosa Phillips, 1836 , from the Mississippi- an of Bolland , Yorkshire, England , and Florence Court, Ireland.

Pustula cf. pustulosa ( Phillips, 1836)

Fig. 13B–D View Fig .

Material.—Two articulated specimens: MPUM 11987 ( RCC 41-1); MPUM 11988 ( RCC 128-7). One dorsal valve: MPUM 11989 ( RCC 128-17a). Four fragments: MPUM 11990 ( RCC 1-18, 50; RCC 41-10b, 27). All from mud mound complex of Ricklow Quarry, Monyash, Derbyshire, UK, Monsal Dale Limestone Formation, Brigantian, upper Visean.

Description.—Medium-sized, planoconvex shell with subtriangular outline; cardinal margin straight, longer than two-thirds maximum width. Corpus cavity deep. Anterior commissure rectimarginate. Ventral valve regularly convex. Dorsal valve flat.

Ventral valve covered by elongated spine bases in irregular quincunx (10–12 per 5 mm 2) except anteriorly on flanks where they are disposed on staggered rows on low, rounded rugae. Rugae are fainter on the remaining surface of the shell. Dorsal valve ornamented by concentric subrounded rugae, increasing in number by intercalation, three per 5.0 mm length. Slightly elongated dimples, distributed on rugae interspaces or quincuncially arranged (10–15 per 5 mm 2).

Long prominent dorsal median septum.

Remarks.—The specimens are close to Pustula pustolosa by the absence of a sulcus-fold and their ornamentation of slightly elongated spine bases-dimples. They differ from P. pyxidiformis ( De Koninck, 1847) , recorded by Brunton and Tilsley (1991) from the Asbian, upper Visean, of Treak Cliff, Derbyshire, in having regularly concentric rugae and spine bases not extending in length beyond a single ruga.

MPUM

Museo Paleontologia Universita degli Studi di Milano

RCC

Roscoff Culture Collection

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