Shetlandia Wrona, 2004
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00758.2020 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/5509C270-FFB7-3B27-FF9E-BA35FE7A18B3 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Shetlandia Wrona, 2004 |
status |
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Type species: Shetlandia multiplicata Wrona, 2004 ; Lower Cambrian clasts from the Miocene Cape Melville Formation , King George Island, South Shetland Islands, Antarctica .
Shetlandia multiplicata Wrona, 2004 Fig. 11 View Fig .
2004 Shetlandia multiplicata sp. nov.; Wrona 2004: 34, figs. 14, 15A– E, H–J, 16.
Material.—Exclusively fragmentary material, with 22 fragments recovered from samples HRA/24, HRA/25, and HRA/14 (NRM X10020–X10024, 5 figured), southern Holyoake Range ( Figs. 1 View Fig , 2 View Fig , Table 1). Cambrian Series 2, Stages 3, 4.
Description.—Fragments preserve flat to gently curved sclerite fields; no large plications or apexes are preserved. No micro-ornament is preserved. Two distinct arrangements of plicae occur on the fragments. Firstly, rows of closely stacked, overlapping arches delineate tall, prominent radial plicae which extend from the top of the plicae to the groove ( Fig. 11A View Fig ). The arches increase in size towards the base of the sclerite. These plicae are separated by grooves with concentrically oriented ribs at their base. These ribs do not contact the base of the arches ( Fig. 11A View Fig 2 View Fig ) but are part of the same growth series. The second type of ornament (found on only one sclerite fragment) is weakly developed pseudoplicae formed by a series of pustules in concentric rows ( Fig. 11D View Fig ). A markedly different type of ornament also occurs and consists not of plicae but of densely packed concentric, wall-like ribs which are also present on one fragment ( Fig. 11B View Fig 1 View Fig , C).
Remarks.— Shetlandia multiplicata was previously known only from glacial erratics recovered from the glaciomarine Miocene Cape Melville Formation, King George Island, South Shetland Islands of West Antarctica and is generally poorly understood (Wrona 1989, 2004). However, despite the fragmentary nature of the holotype, it has unique ornamentation and plication that is unknown from any other tommotiid genus.
The few fragments from the Shackleton Limestone in the Holyoake Range can be confidently assigned to Shetlandia multiplicata Wrona, 2004 , due the unique morphology of the dense plicae. The densely packed arches that make up these plicae are identical in morphology to those originally described from King George Island (Wrona 2004: fig. 14M–T). Pustules arranged into pseudoplicae are also found on some sclerite fragments from King George Island (Wrona 2004: fig. 15H, I). The third ornament of concentric wall-like ribs is also found on both sets of fragmentary material.
Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Cambrian Series 2, Stages 3, 4, of the Shackleton Limestone in southern Holyoake Range, Central Transantarctic Mountains, East Antarctica; carbonate clasts (Cambrian Series 2, Stage 4?) from the Miocene Cape Melville Formation, King George Island, West Antarctica (Wrona 2004).
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