Ribeiria csiro Pojeta, Gilbert-Tomlinson, and Shergold, 1977
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00215.2015 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A787E2-FFEA-FFE4-FCF4-FD1995D6FDEC |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Ribeiria csiro Pojeta, Gilbert-Tomlinson, and Shergold, 1977 |
status |
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Ribeiria csiro Pojeta, Gilbert-Tomlinson, and Shergold, 1977
Fig. 12G–I View Fig .
1977 Ribeiria csiro sp. nov.; Pojeta et al. 1977: 13, 14, pl. 3: 3, 4.
1977 Ribeiria csiro ; Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson 1977: 31, pl. 29: 17.
Type material: Holotype ( CPC 14715 View Materials ), internal mould . Paratype ( CPC 14716 View Materials ), largely imbedded in sandstone with partly preserved shell from the type locality. Both figured by Pojeta et al. (1977: pl. 3: 3, 4) .
Type locality: Stairway Sandstone , South of Maryvale Homestead, Amadeus Basin, southern Northern Territory, Australia .
Type horizon: Silicified sandstone horizon within the Stairway Sandstone.
Material. — 21 specimens, all internal moulds, of which 18 are from the Petermann Creek section and 3 from the Areyonga Gorge section, Middle Ordovician of Australia . Three specimens ( CPC 41487–41489 View Materials ) are figured ( Fig. 12G–I View Fig ) .
Description.—Medium sized Ribeiria with slightly concave and narrow dorsum. Beak projecting above rest of dorsal margin; anterior margin projecting forward of beak; ventral margin arcuate and shell markedly attenuated posteriorly. Internally a prominent oblique pegma and a shell thickening along the posterodorsal margin produce a notch on internal moulds ( Fig. 12H View Fig ). The most distinct character for the species is the prominent triangular beak that projects high above the remaining dorsal margin. In front of the steeply forward descending beak the anterodorsal margin flattens out before ascending slightly towards anterior margin, from where the anterior delineation begins to curve ventrally.
Remarks.—The well-defined prominent beak makes species identification easy if preserved (see Fig. 12G–I View Fig ). Ribeiria csiro is the most abundant rostroconch in the collection. Ribeiria is a widespread genus reported from Europe, Morocco, China, Australia and North America ( Pojeta and Runnegar 1976). Pojeta et al. (1977) erected five new Cambro-Ordovician species, all endemic to Australia, of which Ribeiria csiro is the only species reported from the Stairway Sandstone.
Stratigraphic and geographic range.― The specimens from the Petermann Creek section were found in the two lowermost fossiliferous beds (PC -6–PC -5), whereas the species is occurring at higher stratigraphic levels in the Areyonga Gorge section (bed A +1–A +4), see Figs. 4 View Fig and 5 View Fig . Additional to the type material Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson (1977: pl. 29: 17) illustrated an internal mould ( CPC 15601 View Materials ) from a different Stairway Sandstone locality very close to the Petermann Creek section. Together there is a total of four occurrences of the species. The range of Ribeiria csiro is within the Stairway Sandstone Formation , Darriwilian (Middle Ordovician). The region is in the southern Northern Territory, corresponding to the central part of the Amadeus Basin ( Fig. 1) .
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