Sinuites ramseyensis ( Hicks, 1873 )

Ebbestad, Jan Ove R. & Cope, John C. W., 2021, A low diversity Sinuites gastropod community from the Floian, Early Ordovician, of South Wales, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 66 (2), pp. 319-335 : 323-324

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00854.2020

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:01FF623C-11BB-4A03-8DE7-354990FBF7ED

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8479878A-FFD8-7435-FC96-DCF3C3ABFCD7

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sinuites ramseyensis ( Hicks, 1873 )
status

 

Sinuites ramseyensis ( Hicks, 1873)

Fig. 3 View Fig .

1873 Bellerophon ramseyensis sp. nov.; Hicks 1873: 50, pl. 3: 30–32.

Material.— Fifty­five specimens, NMW 2017.15 View Materials G.3–57, preserved as variably compressed internal moulds. From the Dan­lan­y­Castell quarry, Carmarthen , Wales, UK. Merlinia selwynii Trilobite Zone, Moridunian regional Stage (lower Floian Stage, Fl 1) .

Description.—Specimen length is 10–20 mm. The whorl profile is heart­shaped with height and width being about equal ( Fig. 3D View Fig ). The wide and U­shaped median sinus stretches about 1/3 of a whorl back from the aperture. The typical lateral anterior lobes are sub­angular and at the aperture the lateral lip seem to connect with a lateral­umbilical ridge. A small patch in specimen NMW 2017.15G.7 preserves ornamentation near the umbilical area about 2/3 of a whorl back from the preserved aperture. Fine, slightly wrinkled lines are expressed on the external imprint and may represent subinductural deposits ( Fig. 3E View Fig ) (Horný 1996).

Remarks.— Hicks (1873) described Bellerophon ramseyensis from the Ogof Hên Formation at Ramsey Island and St David’s in Pembrokeshire, south­west Wales, which is identified as a species of Sinuites (images available on the British Geological Survey homepage: http://www.3d­fossils. ac.uk/). The units in Pembrokeshire are the lateral equivalent to those of the Llangynog Inlier discussed herein Fortey and Rushton 2000). Preservation of the Sinuites specimens in the two areas appears quite similar, and as a matter of convenience they may be regarded as constituting the same species.

With around 50 specimens Sinuites is the most abundant taxon in the present material. Deformation does not allow a full appreciation of the morphology, but there is no reason to assume that more than one species is present.

Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Ordovician; world wide.

NMW

Naturhistorisches Museum, Wien

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Family

Sinuitidae

Genus

Sinuites

Loc

Sinuites ramseyensis ( Hicks, 1873 )

Ebbestad, Jan Ove R. & Cope, John C. W. 2021
2021
Loc

Bellerophon ramseyensis

Hicks, H. 1873: 50
1873
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