Evaluating paedomorphic heterochrony in trilobites: the case of the diminutive trilobite Flexicalymene retrorsa minuens from the Cincinnatian Series (Upper Ordovician), Cincinnati region

2007 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 483-498 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brenda R. Hunda ◽  
Nigel C. Hughes
1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 177-177
Author(s):  
Peter B. Lask

Cyclocrinitids are considered to be calcareous green algae closely related to, or members of, the dasycladacean algae. Cyclocrinitids are characterized by a globular thallus 1-5 cm in diameter consisting of whorls of calcified meromes borne from a tubular or spherical central axis. The species Cyclocrinites darwini is distinguished from other cyclocrinitids by the presence of lateral branches arranged in a stellate pattern at the distal end of each merome.C. darwini is restricted to strata of the Cincinnatian Series. Specimens are commonly found in shale-filled channels cutting through nodular, irregularly-bedded limestones within the Mt. Auburn Formation and the lower Sunset Member of the Arnheim Formation. Numerous specimens are also known from the Bellevue Member of the Grant Lake Formation at Maysville, Kentucky. Each of these units has been interpreted to be the top of separate shoaling-upward, third-order cycles. These facies are abundantly fossiliferous, often consisting of broken, abraded, and reworked material.The modern dasyclad Neomeris is cited for its structural similarity to the cyclocrinitids and ecological parallels have been postulated as well. Neomeris and a similar dasyclad Batophora, thrive while attached to pieces of coral rubble at depths of less than 3 m in the high-energy conditions associated with a reef crest environment at Key Largo, Florida.It is likely that C. darwini lived under similar conditions, attached to rubble in shoaling areas. Preservation only occurred in instances when thalli were broken off from their holdfasts and swept into ripple troughs or downslope channels cutting across the shoals. It has been suggested that the presence of cyclocrinitids is indicative of relatively quiet environments below wave base. For Cyclocrinites darwini, the opposite would appear to be the case.


1990 ◽  
Vol 64 (6) ◽  
pp. 992-997 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stig M. Bergström ◽  
Charles E. Mitchell

Recent studies of drill-cores and outcrops have resulted in the discovery of previously unknown, taxonomically diverse, graptolite faunas in the late Middle (Mohawkian) and early Late Ordovician (Cincinnatian) strata in the Cincinnati region, the type area of the Cincinnatian Series. These faunas contain several zonal indices and other biostratigraphically important species that are used for close correlation with the standard graptolite zone succession in New York and Quebec. The new data show that the base of the Cincinnatian Series in its type area is near the middle of the Climacograptus (Diplacanthograptus) spiniferus Zone. Significantly, about a dozen Cincinnati region graptolite species are shared with apparently coeval strata in the standard Australian graptolite zone succession in Victoria, and this key faunal evidence indicates that the base of the typical Cincinnatian corresponds to a level near the middle of the Climacograptus (Climacograptus) baragwanathi Zone (Ea2) of the Eastonian Stage. This represents a considerable revision of some recently published correlations of the basal Cincinnatian in terms of the Australian graptolite zone succession.


1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 74-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles E. Mitchell ◽  
Walter C. Sweet

Ten samples from a 160 m section through the lower Whittaker Formation yielded Red River Province conodonts as well as a shelly macrofossil assemblage representing the "Arctic Ordovician fauna." Both the microfossils and macrofossils have strong affinities with taxa represented in strata of Cincinnatian age in the western Midcontinent Province of North America.Conodont-based graphic correlation of section W-1 with a Composite Standard Section developed for midcontinental United States indicates that the lower Whittaker Formation on the east flank of the Redstone Arch represents nearly the entire Cincinnatian Series. Trilobites of the Ceraurus mackenziensis Zone occur in strata correlative with the upper Edenian and those of the Whittakerites planatus Zone first appear at or just below the projected base of the Maysvillian Stage. The age of the Ceraurinella necra Zone is still uncertain but is likely to be early Edenian.Thaerodonta recedens (Sardeson) and other elements of the Bighornia – Thaerodonta fauna also debut in uppermost Edenian or lowermost Maysvillian strata. The morphology of Sowerbyella redstonensis n.sp. and Thaerodonta recedens from the lower Whittaker Formation indicates that the common ancestor of early Thaerodonta species may have arisen during latest Edenian time. The first appearance of Thaerodonta may constitute a useful biostratigraphic datum throughout the Red River Province. The strongly Thaerodonta-like species, Sowerbyella redstonensis n.sp., is described from silicified material of mid-Edenian age.


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