Nuculites wattii ( Tate, 1896 )

Jakobsen, Kristian G., Brock, Glenn A., Nielsen, Arne T. & Harper, David A. T., 2016, A Darriwilian (Middle Ordovician) bivalve-dominated molluscan fauna from the Stairway Sandstone, Amadeus Basin, central Australia, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 61 (4), pp. 897-924 : 912

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00215.2015

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A787E2-FFF0-FFE3-FCF4-FCE095B9FE36

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Nuculites wattii ( Tate, 1896 )
status

 

Nuculites wattii ( Tate, 1896)

Fig. 11C–F View Fig .

1896 Isoarca wattii sp. nov.; Tate 1896: 108, pl. 2: 17a, b.

1977 Nuculites wattii ( Tate, 1896) ; Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson 1977: 16, pl. 6: 6, 7.

Type material: Lectotype ( SAM T 1220 a) designated by Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson (1977: pl. 6: 6, 7) . Syntype figured by Tate (1896: pl. 2: 17a).

Type locality: Locality between Tempe Downs and Petermann Creek (about 5 km apart) in the Amadeus Basin ( Tate 1896) .

Type horizon: Judging from the quartzitic lithology of the type suite of Nuculites wattii , the taxon is probably from the Stairway Sandstone, probably Darriwilian (Middle Ordovician).

Material.― 90 specimens, all from the Areyonga Gorge section, Middle Ordovician of Australia. The material is rather fragmentary and some of the non-illustrated specimens are tentatively assigned. The four ( CPC 41470–41473 View Materials ) best preserved internal moulds are illustrated ( Fig. 11C–F View Fig ) .

Description.―Shell tumid and shape ovate with prominent anterior myophoric buttress and highly prosogyral umbo. Posterior tooth row consists of about 20 chevron or half-chevron shaped teeth with apex pointing towards umbo ( Fig. 11F View Fig ) and constitute about 75% of the total length (transverse) of the valve.

Remarks.― Nuculites is a designation typically used for early Palaeozoic palaeotaxodonts with a prominent anterior myophoric buttress, and the group is in need of taxonomic revision. Tate (1896: 108) discussed the dentition and noted that there are a few large anterior teeth but numerous smaller teeth located posteriorly. There may be space for a few teeth anteriorly in the specimens but they appear very indistinct (see Fig. 11F View Fig ). Tate (1896) counted about 20 teeth posteriorly, which is the same number observed on specimens collected for this study.

When a cast of the species is viewed from above the umbonal ventricosity hides the hinge-line posteriorly and this is a way of separating Nuculites wattii from rather similar Sthenodonta eastii if the myophoric buttress is not preserved. Stratigraphic and geographic range.― Nuculites wattii is endemic to central Australia. The exact type locality is unknown but seems to be close to the Petermann Creek section studied here (see type material). However, not a single specimen assigned to Nuculites wattii was recovered from this section and all specimens derive from bed A -9 ( Fig. 4 View Fig ) in the Areyonga Gorge section located some 40 km further north (Fig. 3). The range of the species 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).

SAM

South African Museum

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Bivalvia

Order

Nuculanida

Family

Malletiidae

Genus

Nuculites

Loc

Nuculites wattii ( Tate, 1896 )

Jakobsen, Kristian G., Brock, Glenn A., Nielsen, Arne T. & Harper, David A. T. 2016
2016
Loc

Isoarca wattii

Tate, R. 1896: 108
1896
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