Sthenodonta sp. B

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 : 910-911

publication ID

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

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A787E2-FFF2-FFFD-FCF4-F9F396BFFE33

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sthenodonta sp. B
status

 

Sthenodonta sp. B

Fig. 11A View Fig .

Material.― 46 specimens, of which we only figure CPC 41468 View Materials as most of the specimens are poorly preserved. The bulk of the material was recovered from beds PC -6–PC 2 in the Petermann Creek section and only two specimens from bed A + 3 in the Areyonga Gorge section ( Figs. 4 View Fig , 5 View Fig ). Most specimens (39 out of 46) were found in bed PC -5. All Middle Ordovician of Australia .

Description.―Inequilateral sub-ovate Sthenodonta species carrying a rounded and anteriorly pointing umbo; shell profile relatively flat; dorsal margin straight, ventral margin straight to sub-rounded, anterior margin straight to rounded ventrally and posterior margin rounded. Ornament of growth lines distinct. Outline of teeth uncertain due to poor preservation.

Remarks.― Sthenodonta sp. B is quite similar to Sthenodonta sp. A and S. eastii . As most of the specimens are preserved as external moulds it complicates comparison of internal characters with the other species. Sthenodonta sp. B is separated from Sthenodonta sp. A due to a more extended posterior part of the valve, making the overall shell shape sub-ovate rather than sub-circular (compare Fig. 11A View Fig vs. Fig. 10N View Fig ).

The species is separated from S. eastii due to the much better defined growth lines (compare Fig. 11A View Fig vs. Fig. 10J View Fig 2 View Fig ) as well as the overall lower shell profile and the less demarcated umbo. The discussed Sthenodonta species have an umbo pointing in an anterior direction and generally the umbo on Sthenodonta sp. B is slightly more dorsally directed as compared to the two other Sthenodonta species. Sthenodonta sp. B likely represents a new, as yet unnamed species. However, due to the generally poor state of preservation among the specimens and lack of preserved characteristic taxonomic features, Sthenodonta sp. B has not been described formally as a new species.

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