Burrowed Phacops rana from the Moscow Formation of New York

1988 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 311-312 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul D. Zell

The trilobite Phacops rana has previously been documented in two life positions: horizontally outstretched and enrolled (Hall and Clarke, 1888). A specimen of Phacops rana was recovered in an unusual life position from the Windom Member of the Moscow Formation (Figure 1). It was collected from a borrow pit along Castle Hill Road, 1 km east of Earlville in Chenango County, New York. The trilobite appears to have burrowed tail first into the substrate, with only part of the cephalon and one or two thoracic segments exposed above the sediment surface. The orientation of the eyes indicate that the visual field was horizontal. The thorax angled into the substrate at an angle of approximately 50° from the horizontal, with the pygidium tilted dorsally relative to the thorax. Compaction effects appear to be slight. Because the specimen was found in situ, no doubt exists as to its orientation with respect to bedding. It is also evident from bedding plane surfaces that this trilobite had burrowed, and was not simply draped over an uneven substrate, as it intersects three bedding planes. There is no evidence of any object over which it could have been draped. No burrow trace, lining, or scratch marks are preserved. No other specimens of Phacops in this position have been reported.

2013 ◽  
Vol 87 (4) ◽  
pp. 710-725 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. D. Muscente ◽  
Warren D. Allmon

The feather-shaped Plumalina Hall, 1858 is revised on the basis of new and reexamined specimens from New York. Previously described from Givetian through Famennian deposits, a single compression of P. tenera n. sp. from the Rochester Shale extends the range into the Wenlock, and provides new information regarding Plumalina's biology. We assess the utility of morphologic characters in diagnoses of taxa, and present the first quantitative analysis of fossil hydroids to distinguish P. brevis n. sp. (Frasnian) from other Devonian species.Plumalina has been compared to plants, graptolites, and octocorals. Some interpretations have proposed affinities among hydrozoans based on colony form and the presence of putative polyp bases. Our analysis shows that, like extant thecate hydrozoans, Plumalina had a delicate, chitinous hydrocaulus with weakly articulated hydrocladia. An assemblage of in situ specimens, steeply inclined relative to the bedding plane in an Ithaca Formation (Frasnian Stage) turbidite, indicates that Devonian species produced sessile, erect colonies attached to a hard substrate, comparable to extant hydroids that feed in currents. Morphometric comparisons between putative Plumalina polyp bases and polyp bases of modern analogues reveal similarities to hydroids in the superfamily Plumularioidea McCrady, 1859. Plumalina is the most abundant fossil hydroid so far reported, and is pertinent to interpretations of the hydrozoan record.


1982 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 33-39
Author(s):  
C Y Kuo

An existing, three-dimensional, Eulerian-Lagrangian finite-difference model was modified and used to examine the far-field transport processes of dumped sewage sludge in the New York Bight. Both in situ and laboratory data were utilized in an attempt to approximate model inputs such as mean current speed, vertical and horizontal diffusion coefficients, particle size distributions, and specific gravities. Concentrations of the sludge near the sea surface predicted from the computer model were compared qualitatively with those remotely sensed.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1981 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 483-483
Author(s):  
T. E. C.

Job Lewis Smith (1827-1897), a founder of the American Pediatric Society and who, with Abraham Jacobi, established pediatrics as a specialty in our country, was a firm believer that strong mental impressions during pregnancy might be a cause of congenital malformations. He gave the following explanation of the cause of cleft lip and palate in the seventh edition of his textbook, published in 1890.1 Mrs. D[unknown], Eighth avenue, New York, seven months before the birth of her child, when visiting at a distance, accidentally broke the plate of a full set of upper teeth. The line of fracture was antero-posterior and through the centre of the plate. Being away from home, she was much annoyed by the accident and retained the fragments of the plate in situ by pressure with the tongue. As she could not open her mouth without the plate falling out, except it was retained by pressure with the tongue, her mind was dwelling almost constantly on the accident during the few days of her visit. Her boy, born seven months subsequently, had a hare-lip and cleft palate. The mother stated that the deficiency in the lip and palate corresponded precisely to the location of the fracture in the plate.


1970 ◽  
Vol 107 (1) ◽  
pp. 51-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. T. Warren ◽  
R. K. Harrison ◽  
H. E. Wilson ◽  
E. G. Smith ◽  
M. J. C. Nutt

SummaryStructures affecting certain bedding planes, and simulating sedimentary ripples, have been found at a number of horizons in the Wenlock and Ludlow rocks of Denbighshire, North Wales. The megascopic appearance of the ripples, including their association with linear structures and their miscroscopical fabric are described in detail; and it is concluded that they are of tectonic origin, being manifestations of bedding-plane slip. The orientations of the ripples and other minor structures suggest that the stress responsible was the regional stress that produced folding, faulting and cleavage.


Eye ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 18 (8) ◽  
pp. 850-853 ◽  
Author(s):  
K Inoue ◽  
S Hashida ◽  
Y Tajima ◽  
M Wakakura ◽  
J Inoue ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 129 (5) ◽  
pp. 668-671 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.Matthew Bushley ◽  
Vernon C. Parmley ◽  
Patrick Paglen

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