Sthendonta paenesymmetrica, Jakobsen & Brock & Nielsen & Harper, 2016
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00215.2015 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A787E2-FFF2-FFFF-FFBE-FEF09487FEB3 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Sthendonta paenesymmetrica |
status |
sp. nov. |
Sthendonta paenesymmetrica sp. nov.
Fig. 10K, L View Fig .
Etymology: The new name alludes to the almost symmetrical shell shape, which is unusual among sthenodontids in the material.
Holotype: CPC 41464 View Materials , an internal mould ( Fig. 10K View Fig ).
Type locality: Areyonga Gorge, Amadeus Basin, central Australia.
Type horizon: Bed A - 5 in the Areyonga Gorge section ( Fig. 4 View Fig ). Darriwilian (Middle Ordovician), Stairway Sandstone ( Figs. 1, 3).
Material.― 68 specimens, of which two are figured ( CPC 41464 View Materials and CPC 41465 View Materials ); all specimens are internal moulds recovered from the Petermann Creek section, Middle Ordovician of Australia .
Diagnosis.―Small, nearly equidimensional, sub-circular sthenodontid. Indistinct palaeotaxodont teeth; umbo wide, well-defined, rounded and posteriorly projecting.
Description.―Dorsal margin rounded, sloping rapidly into anterior margin; posterior margin rounded towards dorsum, not projecting. Sub-circular shell shape carrying a wide, rounded and dorsally pointing umbo; shell profile relatively flat. Weakly developed external ornament of growth lines on some specimens ( Fig. 10K View Fig ), otherwise a smooth surface. The holotype is 12 mm high and 13.5 mm long, making the species nearly equidimensional (about 90% as high as long).
Remarks.―The outline of the species is similar to Sthenodonta etheridgei ( Tate, 1896) figured by Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson (1977: pl. 7: 8, 9). These specimens are latex replicas of external moulds showing strongly developed commarginal striae on the surface. It is difficult to compare the external characters of S. etheridgei with S. paenesymmetrica sp. nov., as the latter almost entirely consists of internal moulds. The distinct commarginal striae presented on the former is not even indicated on S. paenesymmetrica sp. nov., and for this reason the two species are separated.
The two species have the most circular shell outline of the bivalves recovered from the Stairway Sandstone and are as such atypical nucularcids, which usually possess an inequilateral shell shape. Pojeta and Gilbert-Tomlinson (1977: 18) assigned the species S. etheridgei to Sthenodonta due to the arrangement of teeth (long posterior tooth row and short anterior tooth row). The teeth of Sthendonta paenesymmetrica sp. nov. are poorly preserved but the presence of few indistinct teeth indicates a very similar arrangement.
Stratigraphic and geographic range.― Sthendonta paenesymmetrica sp. nov. was recovered from bed PC -5 to PC + 10 in the Petermann Creek section and bed A -5 to A + 3 in the Areyonga Gorge section ( Figs. 4 View Fig , 5 View Fig ). Almost 85% of the species were found in from the Petermann Creek section. The same distributional pattern between the sections is observed for the other sthenodontids. 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).
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