Isorthoceras cf. elongatocinctum ( Portlock, 1843 ) Kröger, 2013
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2013.41 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A2F1B9ED-870A-466E-B35E-BD5DA782476E |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3815204 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AD4D9054-CD5E-6A5A-F3CA-4075FC23F826 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Isorthoceras cf. elongatocinctum ( Portlock, 1843 ) |
status |
comb. nov. |
Isorthoceras cf. elongatocinctum ( Portlock, 1843) comb. nov. Figs 17A, D View Fig , 23 View Fig D-E, 27
Orthoceras elongato-cinctum Portlock, 1843: 372 , pl. 27, fig. 2a-b. Orthoceras elongato cinctum – Baily 1875: pl. 12, fig. 10 (non pl. 13, fig. 8; see discussion below). Orthoceras elongatocinctum – Blake 1882: 119, pl. 13, figs 7, 8, 8a. ― Evans 1996: 118, pl. 21, figs 1, 2, text-fig. 21f.
Geisonocerina elongatocinctum – Holland 1993: 39, text-fig. 1g, i; 2000: 181, text-fig. 1m. Orthoceras aff. elongatocinctum – Evans 2002: 81, pl. 1, figs 1-3.
Diagnosis
Transversally ornamented, straight Isorthoceras with circular cross section and comparatively low angle of expansion of ca. 4°, chamber distance 0.3–0.4 of corresponding diameter; transverse ornamentation consists of distinctly elevated, sharp, sometimes imbricate lirae, with distance of ca. six to ten per millimetre; siphuncle nearly central with diameter ca. 0.1 of corresponding conch diameter. (Adopted from Holland 1993; Evans 1993.)
Type locality and horizon
Killey Bridge Formation, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland. Katian Stage.
Material examined
Twenty-two specimens, one ( PMU 26809) from Osmundsberget; 20 from Kallholn, Siljan district, Sweden ( PMU 26810–26829); all Boda Limestone, Boda Core Member, late Katian, Late Ordovician. One additional specimen ( PMU 26830) from mid Katian Kullsberg Limestone, Kullsberg, Siljan district, Sweden.
Description
Specimen PMU 26825 is a portion of the phragmocone and a nearly complete mature body chamber, with a diameter increasing from 8 to 13 mm and a length of 75 mm (angle of expansion 3.8°). It is ornamented
with sharp, distinctly raised lirae; apically with ca. four to five lirae per millimetre. Adorally the lirae are increasingly more crowded and irregularly spaced, with ca. ten per millimetre near the aperture. The lirae are slightly oblique and form a distinct, but shallow hyponomic sinus on the antisiphuncular side of the conch. An apertural shell thickening and the low apical angle indicate maturity.
When comparing the seventeen measured specimens, a clear trend of decreasing angle of expansion becomes apparent ( Fig. 27 View Fig ). In early growth stages the angle is as high as 7°, but it continuously decreases with increasing conch diameter. The position of the siphuncle is preserved in specimens PMU 26814–26815 (SPR 0.49, 0.46), 26810 (SPR 0.4), 26823 (SPR 0.43) and 26826 (SPR 0.44). In smaller specimens the siphuncle is more eccentric, but in all other specimens it is nearly centrally positioned. The septal spacing varies between 0.3 (PMU 26815) and 0.44 (PMU 26826) of the corresponding conch height.
Remarks
This species was previously known only from the latest Katian sediments of Northern Ireland and Wales. Details of the internal characters were described by Evans (1993: fig. 8), who revised the species based on more than one hundred specimens. Evans (1993: 167) described the septal necks as orthoconic, but his fig. 8 shows septal necks which must be termed “suborthochoanitic” in the strict sense (see Material and Methods, above). The shape of the septal necks, the constricted siphuncle, the general conch shape and the ornamentation are similar to other species of Isorthoceras . Based on this similarity, this species is here assigned to Isorthoceras .
The largest specimen in the Irish material has a diameter of 25 mm. The specimens from the Boda Limestone and the diagram in Evans (1993: fig. 9) suggest a maximum size of less than 15 mm, which is the reason why the Boda specimens are assigned with the addendum “cf.” to this species.
These specimens are identical in external characters to the specimens described by Evans (1993). Additional information on the variability of the apical angle and the ornamentation are provided by the specimens from the Boda Limestone. Specimen PMU 26825 is the most completely preserved fragment and demonstrates the ontogenetic variation of the transverse ornamentation and angle of expansion ( Figs 17A, D View Fig ; 23 View Fig D-E). The angle of expansion of mature parts of the shell is very small, and the spacing of the transverse lirae is narrower and more irregular in later growth stages.
Comparison
This species differs from other species of Isorthoceras in having an ornamentation of fine, but distinctly elevated, acute transverse lirae, ca. 0.2 to 0.1 mm distant.
Geisonoceras heintzi Strand, 1934 , from the Sørbakken formation in the Ringerike Distict, Norway, probably represents a species of Isorthoceras and is a small, slender transversally ornamented form that differs from I. elongatocinctum comb. nov. in having transverse lirae which are more distantly spaced (distance ca. 0.4 mm). Isorthoceras heroyense ( Strand, 1934) comb. nov. is similar an ornamentation, but differs in having a more eccentric siphuncle (SPR 0.31) and a larger angle of expansion (5–9°).
Stratigraphic and geographic range
Kildare Limestone, Killey Bridge Formation, Portrane Limestone, late Katian, Ireland, Keisley Limestone, late Katian, Cumbria, UK ( Holland 1993; Evans 1996, 2002); Sholeshook Limestone, late Katian, South Wales, UK ( Evans 1996); lower Wether Law Linn Formation, Telychian, Ireland ( Holland 2002); Boda Limestone, late Katian, Siljan District, Sweden.
PMU |
Paleontological Museum of Uppsala |
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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Genus |
Isorthoceras cf. elongatocinctum ( Portlock, 1843 )
Kröger, Björn 2013 |
Geisonocerina elongatocinctum
Holland C. H. 1993: 39 |
Orthoceras elongato-cinctum
Evans D. H. 1996: 118 |
Blake J. F. A. 1882: 119 |
Portlock J. E. 1843: 372 |