Sthenodonta eastii ( Tate, 1896 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00215.2015 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A787E2-FFF3-FFFF-FF4B-FCD39504FEB0 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Sthenodonta eastii ( Tate, 1896 ) |
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Sthenodonta eastii ( Tate, 1896)
Fig. 10A–J View Fig .
1896 Isoarca eastii sp. nov.; Tate 1896: 106, pl. 2: 12a.
1896 Isoarca eastii var. modiolaeformis ; Tate 1896: 106, pl. 2: 12b.
1977 Sthenodonta eastii ; Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson 1977 [partim]: 17, pl. 12: 1–10; pl. 13: 1–6, 8; non pl. 13: 7 [= Sthenodonta sp. A ]. Type material: Syntypes (SAM T 1274a, b) investigated by Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson (1977: 17), of which they designated lectotype (SAM T 1274a; original of Tate 1896: pl. 2: 12a). It was refigured by Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson (1977: pl. 12: 3, 4).
Type locality: Middle Valley (Tempe Downs), which is in the Amadeus Basin, southern Northern Territory, Australia .
Type horizon: In sandstone and quartzite underlying the fossiliferous limestone, Ordovician.
Material.― 550 specimens recovered from the Stairway Sandstone at Areyonga Gorge (n = 130) and Petermann Creek (n = 420), Middle Ordovician of Australia. The nine illustrated specimens, including latex casts, are numbered CPC 41455–41463 View Materials .
Description.―Highly inequilateral and tumid nucularcid with prominent umbo; shell elongated ovate and extends only slightly anteriorly beyond umbo; dorsal and ventral margins arcuate with anterior and posterior margin rounded; strongly developed anterior myophoric buttress; uninterrupted anterior and posterior taxodont tooth rows that meet at an obtuse angle (>100°), with anterior tooth row much shorter than posterior tooth row; peg-like teeth below umbo with chevron or half-chevron shaped teeth in posterior direction; apex of teeth points toward umbo (see Fig. 10A–G View Fig ). A distinct border following the ventral margin is particularly pronounced on adult specimens ( Fig. 10F View Fig ). Growth lines are faintly discernible on external moulds ( Fig. 10I View Fig 2, J 2 View Fig ).
Remarks.―The Nucularcidae include two genera: Nucularca Pojeta and Stott, 2007 and Sthenodonta Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson, 1977 . The former is found in North America and the latter is endemic to central Australia (Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson 1977; Pojeta and Stott 2007). Nucularcids differ from other Ordovician palaeotaxodonts by having a hinge plate that is broad and arcuate.
Sthenodonta eastii comprises 43% of the determinable bivalves in the two investigated sections. It is readily identifiable if the strongly developed anterior myophoric buttress is preserved ( Fig. 10H View Fig ). Within the investigated sections four times as many specimens were recovered from Petermann Creek as the Areyonga Gorge section (see Figs. 4 View Fig and 5 View Fig ). The Petermann Creek section contains more very fine sand to silt-dominated beds, which appears to have been the preferred substrate of S. eastii although the species is also found in most facies types in the sections (albeit in lower numbers).
Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson (1977: 17–19) described five species assigned to Sthenodonta , of which two were reported from the Nora Formation of the Georgina Basin, one or possibly two from the Stairway Sandstone and two to possibly four from the Stokes Siltstone in the Amadeus Basin (see Fig. 6). Sthenodonta eastii is the only species recorded with certainty from the Stairway Sandstone. Tate (1896: 106) reported Isoarca etheridgei from “limestone, Middle Valley at Tempe Downs, Petermann Creek by Camp at Laurie´s Creek, north of Tempe Vale, and Chandler Range”. Thus, the type suite of I. etheridgei was probably obtained from several localities, but the lithology of most syntypes suggests that they originated from the Stairway Sandstone (Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson 1977: 17).
In the material at hand, Sthenodonta is represented by four species, of which three are new. Sthenodonta eastii can be separated from Sthenodonta sp. A in having a more asymmetric shape and a higher shell profile. Sthenodonta eastii is separated from Sthenodonta sp. B by its higher shell profile and from S. paenesymmetrica sp. nov. by a much more asymmetric shape; whereas the height in shell profiles of these species are very similar.
An example of a well-preserved juvenile internal mould with associated external mould is illustrated on Fig. 10I, J View Fig . The external latex cast displays faint growth lines, which separate the species from Sthenodonta sp. B having well marked growth lines.
Stratigraphic and geographic range.― Sthenodonta eastii has a stratigraphic range from bed PC -6 to PC + 11 in the Petermann Creek section encompassing 65 m true thickness and from bed A -9 to A + 5 in the Areyonga Gorge section (85 m true thickness). The species is present in almost every fossiliferous bed in these sections ( Figs. 4 View Fig , 5 View Fig ).
S. eastii is a widespread species in the Amadeus Basin, where it is documented from 27 localities by Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson (1977). In 25 of these localities the species was recorded from unknown levels within the Stairway Sandstone. The two additional localities represent occurrences in the overlying Stokes Siltstone. The species is also reported from an uncertain stratigraphic level (probably the Nora Formation) in the Georgina Basin (Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson 1977: 17; see Fig. 6). The range of the Nora Formation is Early to Middle Ordovician (the major part of the formation is Middle Ordovician). The region is the south-eastern Northern Territory, and the locality is located east of Mt Ultim. This location corresponds to the south-western limit of the Georgina Basin.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Sthenodonta eastii ( Tate, 1896 )
Jakobsen, Kristian G., Brock, Glenn A., Nielsen, Arne T. & Harper, David A. T. 2016 |
Isoarca eastii
Tate, R. 1896: 106 |
Isoarca eastii var. modiolaeformis
Tate, R. 1896: 106 |