Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-5nwft Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-06T15:39:46.825Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

New record of the trimerellid brachiopod Gasconsia, a rare Silurian lazarus taxon

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2015

Rodney Watkins*
Affiliation:
Geology Department, Milwaukee Public Museum, 800 West Wells St., Milwaukee, WI 53233

Extract

Gasconsia Northrop, 1939, is a rare trimerellid that appears in the Upper Ordovician (Ashgill) and then reappears in the Upper Silurian (Wenlock/Ludlow) (Hanken and Harper, 1985; Popov and Holmer, 2000). This note is the first documented report of Gasconsia from the type Ludlow of the Welsh Borderland. Gasconsia transversus (Salter) occurs in the Lower Bringewood beds (upper part of Gorstian stage) in a small quarry on the north side of the Holloway to Upper Millichope road, directly opposite the entrance to Millichope Park (grid ref. SO 52748911). The material consists of internal and external molds of one brachial valve and one articulated individual (Fig. 1). This species was described as Obolus Davidsoni var. transversus [Salter MS] by Davidson (1866) from the Wenlock (Homerian stage) of the Dudley and Woolhope areas of the English Midlands and Welsh Borderland. Davidson and King (1874) subsequently referred to it as Dinobolus transversus (Salter), and Cocks (1978), in selecting a lectotype of transversus, retained its assignment to Dinobolus. However, illustrations of transversus in Davidson (1866, pl. 5, figs. 1-6) and Davidson and King (1874, pl. 18, fig. 12) clearly show that it belongs in Gasconsia rather than Dinobolus.

Type
Paleontological Notes
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bourque, P.-A., Amyot, G., Desrochers, A., Gignac, H., Gosselin, G., Lachambre, G., and Laliberté, J.-Y. 1986. Silurian and Lower Devonian reef and carbonate complexes of the Gaspé basin, Québec—a summary. Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology, 34:452489.Google Scholar
Calef, C. E., and Hancock, N. J. 1974. Wenlock and Ludlow marine communities in Wales and the Welsh Borderland. Palaeontology, 17:779810.Google Scholar
Cocks, L. R. M. 1978. A review of British Lower Palaeozoic brachiopods, including a synoptic revision of Davidson's monograph. Palaeontographical Society, London, 256 p.Google Scholar
Davidson, T. 1866. A monograph of the British fossil Brachiopoda, Pt. VII, No. I, The Silurian Brachiopoda. Palaeontographical Society, London, 88 p.Google Scholar
Davidson, T., and King, W. 1874. On the Trimerellidae, a Palaeozoic family of the Palliobranchs or Brachiopoda. Quarterly Journal Geological Society of London, 30:124173.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hanken, N.-M., and Harper, D. A. T. 1985. The taxonomy, shell structure, and palaeoecology of the trimerellid brachiopod Gasconsia Northrop. Palaeontology, 28:243254.Google Scholar
Hurst, J. M. 1975. Wenlock carbonate, level bottom, brachiopod-dominated communities from Wales and the Welsh Borderland. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 17:227255.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norford, B. S. 1997. Correlation chart and biostratigraphy of the Silurian rocks of Canada. International Union of Geological Sciences Publication no. 35, 77 p.Google Scholar
Northrop, S. A. 1939. Paleontology and stratigraphy of the Silurian rocks of the Port Daniel—Black Cape region, Gaspé. Geological Society of America Special Paper 21, 302 p.Google Scholar
Popov, L. E., and Holmer, L. E. 2000. Trimerellida, p. 184192. In Williams, A. et al. (eds.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Pt. H, Brachiopoda, Revised 2. Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Popov, L. E., Holmer, L. E., and Ju, V., Gorjansky, . 1997. Late Ordovician and Early Silurian Trimerellide brachiopods from Kazakhstan. Journal of Paleontology, 71:584598.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ratcliffe, K. T. 1991. Palaeoecology, taphonomy and distribution of brachiopod assemblages from the Much Wenlock Limestone Formation of England and Wales. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 83:265293.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Watkins, R. 1979. Benthic community organization in the Ludlow Series of the Welsh Borderland. Bulletin British Museum Natural History (Geology), 31:175280.Google Scholar