Fengzuella zhejiangensis He and Yu, 1992

Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Clausen, Sébastien & Vendrasco, Michael J., 2015, An early Cambrian fauna of skeletal fossils from the Emyaksin Formation, northern Siberia, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 60 (2), pp. 421-512 : 479

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2012.0004

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C3891D-1516-C24E-FCC9-FE43CEF4FF37

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Fengzuella zhejiangensis He and Yu, 1992
status

 

Fengzuella zhejiangensis He and Yu, 1992

Fig. 54 View Fig .

Material.—Single laterally flattened bilaterally symmetrical sclerite, SMNH X 4776, from sample 7/45 ( Fig. 54A View Fig ) and two curved bilaterally symmetrical sclerites, SMNH X 4777 and 4778, from samples 7/55.8, and 7/64 (respectively). Emyaksin Formation, Bol’shaya Kuonamka; correlated with the Delgadella anabara and Judomia zones, Atdabanian Stage. An additional specimen, SMNH X 4779, derives from sample 2001-11b, collected along the Sinyaya River, tributary of the Lena River in the middle reaches ( Rozanov and Missarzhevsky 1966), Atdabanian Stage, but the exact stratigraphic position of the sample is not known.

Description.—Calcium phosphatic sclerites of planispiral and curved types. The planispiral sclerite is ca. 0.3 mm in diameter and consists of 1¼ whorls. The curved sclerites are 0.5–0.8 mm long. Along each side of the sclerites, the wall has two longitudinal depressions separated from each other by a ridge. The central cavity extends from the aperture to the apex, and has an oval or rhomboidal, star-shaped cross-section with convex sides. The wall is multi-layered and consists of basally secreted and adapically overlapping thin growth lamellae ( Fig. 54A View Fig 4 View Fig , B 2 View Fig , D 4 View Fig ).

Remarks.— Steiner et al. (2003) noted that curved sclerites predominate (85%) and the planispiral type is rare. It has been also suggested that the scleritome consisted of densely packed growing sclerites with their proximal parts attached to a soft tissue. Presumably, the sclerites had originally a sclerotised organic (non-mineralised?) composition. The outer parts of the growth lamellae were deposited externally, probably within an invaginated tissue.

Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Problematic sclerites of Fengzuella zhejiangensis He and Yu, 1992 were originally described from South and North China, from beds that possibly correlate with the Anabarites trisulcatus Protohertzina anabarica Assemblage Zone of the lower Meishucunian Stage ( Steiner et al. 2003). That correlation is not certain, however, and the beds might alternatively be correlated with the Qiongzhusian Stage of China and Atdabanian Stage of Siberia ( Steiner et al. 2003, 2007). A single planispiral sclerite similar to Fengzuella is reported, as a coiled and flat discoidal problematicum, from lower middle Cambrian strata of the Kuonamka Formation, Khorbusuonka River, Olenyok Uplift, Siberian Platform ( Müller et al. 1995: 114, fig. 5E, F). Planispiral and transitional sclerites of, probably, a new species of Fengzuella are also available from the upper Series 2 of Laurentia (North Greenland; AK and John S. Peel, unpublished observation).

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF