Annelida Lamarck, 1809

Georgieva, Magdalena N., Little, Crispin T. S., Watson, Jonathan S., Sephton, Mark A., Ball, Alexander D. & Glover, Adrian G., 2019, Identification of fossil worm tubes from Phanerozoic hydrothermal vents and cold seeps, Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 17 (4), pp. 287-329 : 8-10

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/14772019.2017.1412362

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10912435

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C0814B-902A-FFA3-3D83-F89A4F4CF960

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Annelida Lamarck, 1809
status

 

Phylum Annelida Lamarck, 1809 View in CoL View at ENA

Family incertae sedis

‘Sassenfjorden area tubes’

( Fig. 14 View Figure 14 )

2011 ‘vestimentiferan’ worm tubes Hammer et al. 21, fig. 5d.

2012 worm tubes Hryniewicz, Hammer et al. 118, fig. 5a.

Material. Svalbard 2007-03, long tube with yellowish wall. PMO 2009-01, single tube with dark black wall. PMO 2009-03: single tube with longitudinal wrinkles. 171.002D, 170.996, 171.027, selection of thin sections of different tubes. Donated by K. Hryniewicz.

Occurrence. Sassenfjorden area, Svalbard. Seep carbonates in shale and shale and siltstone, Slottsmøya Member, upper Agardhfjellet Formation, Volgian–Ryazanian (latest Jurassic–earliest Cretaceous) ( Hammer et al. 2011; Hryniewicz et al. 2012, 2015; Vinn et al. 2014).

Description. Carbonate tube sections measuring 2.9– 5.7 mm in diameter, all fairly straight, and not attached to other tubes. The long tube appears unornamented ( Fig. 14A View Figure 14 ) and the tube with a black wall is smooth and shows no ornamentation apart from a possible small collar ( Fig. 14B View Figure 14 ), while the remaining tube fragment bears what may be faint longitudinal wrinkles ( Fig. 14C View Figure 14 ). In thin section, some of the tubes exhibit thick, neatly multi-layered walls ( Fig. 14D, E View Figure 14 ). Curving delaminated layers can also be observed in some of the tube sections ( Fig. 14F View Figure 14 ), suggesting that they were originally organic in composition. A subset of tubes exhibit diffuse (poorly preserved?) tube walls ( Fig. 14G View Figure 14 ).

Remarks. Non-serpulid, originally organic-walled tubes from the Sassenfjorden area were suggested to have been made by siboglinids ( Hammer et al. 2011; Hryniewicz et al. 2015). However, the tubes examined do not clearly group with the tubes of modern annelid families included in cladistic and cluster analyses ( Figs 22 View Figure 22 , 24 View Figure 24 ). The tube sections with thick, neatly multi-layered walls that were observed within this study were possibly made by vestimentiferans, in which this tube structure is widely observed. However, the broad morphology of this tube is presently unknown, and tubes from this deposit in general warrant further investigation as several different tube types are present. Hence, these tubes are broadly ascribed to the annelids.

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF