New Damselflies of the Family Kennedyidae (Odonata: Protozygoptera) from the Upper Permian of the Vologda Region

2021 ◽  
Vol 55 (4) ◽  
pp. 396-404
Author(s):  
A. S. Felker
2010 ◽  
Vol 84 (6) ◽  
pp. 1152-1176 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilya Tëmkin ◽  
John Pojeta

An exceptionally well-preserved silicified bivalve from the Upper Permian of Texas is described and assigned to a new genus and species,Cassiavellia galtarae, placed in the family Bakevelliidae. The species represents one of the earliest and best characterized unequivocal occurrences of the multivincular ligament in the superfamily Pterioidea. The silicified material provides a wealth of information on the morphology of inadequately known Paleozoic pterioideans, including hitherto undescribed aspects of the larval shell, auricular sulcus, muscle scars, and dental ontogeny. The discovery of the condyle-fossa complex on the anteroventral shell margin, a feature previously undescibed in Bivalvia, raises the question of the homology and taxonomic significance of the problematic subumbonal ridge-like structures in Pterioidea. In life,C. galtaraewas probably an epifaunal right-pleurothetic bivalve, byssally attached to hard or raised flexible substrata. In addition toC. galtarae, another new species,C. nadkevnae, is placed inCassiavellia.


2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 20170456 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhuo Feng ◽  
Yong Lv ◽  
Yun Guo ◽  
Hai-Bo Wei ◽  
Hans Kerp

Today, cycads are a small group of gymnospermous plants with a limited distribution in the (sub)tropics, but they were major constituents of Mesozoic floras. Fossil leaves sporadically found in latest Carboniferous and Permian floras have putatively been ascribed to cycads. However, their true affinity remains unclear due to the lack of anatomical evidence. Virtually all modern cycads have pinnate leaves, but this type of leaf morphology is by no means unique for cycads. Pinnate leaves of Plagiozamites oblongifolius Halle 1927 with well-preserved cuticles showing the epidermal anatomy are here described from the upper Permian Xuanwei Formation of Yunnan Province, Southwest China. The cuticles show a clear differentiation into costal and intercostal zones; stomata are confined to the intercostal zones on both the upper and lower leaf surfaces. The external morphology and the epidermal anatomy of these fossil leaves are closely comparable with those of extant cycads, particularly members of the family Zamiaceae.


1956 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 165 ◽  
Author(s):  
JW Evans

New species of Triassic Homoptera and Heteroptera from the Brookvale series of New South Wales and Mt. Crosby, Queensland, are described, one homopteron from the Upper Permian of Warner's Bay, N.S.W., and Homoptera previously recorded from Palaeozoic and Mesozoic strata in Australia and elsewhere are reviewed. New illustrations, made from type specimens, are given for some Australian species. Representatives of the family Scytinopteridae, previously known only from Permian strata, are recorded from the Triassic. Two forewings of uncertain affinities, but having venational features similar to hylicids, are ascribed to species in genera placed in a new family, the Hylicellidae. For leaf-hoppers which are regarded as transitional between the Palaeozoic and Mesozoic faunas, a new family, the Stenoviciidae, is proposed, and another new family, the Chiliocyclidae, is proposed for a group of Mesozoic leaf-hoppers of wide distribution. A forewing from the Triassic of Queensland is identified as that of a eurymelid and another as a cicadellid. The earliest undoubted cercopid, so far recorded, is described from the Triassic; a new family, the Eoscarterellidae, is defined to comprise insects of probable cercopoid affinities, and the family Dysmorphoptilidae is transferred to the Cercopoidea. As the genus Palaeontina Butler is considered not to be a homopteron, a new family name, the Cicadomorphidae, is proposed for large Homoptera with cicada-like wings, previously recorded only from the Jurassic of Europe and which formerly have been included in the family Palaeontinidae. A new genus and species belonging to the Cicadomorphidae is described from the Triassic of New South Wales. The relationships of a new family, the Cicadoprosbolidae, and of the Mesogereonidae are discussed and both are considered to be allied to the Cicadidae. Two new psylloids are described and also an aphid, the latter being the first representative of the Aphidoidea to be recorded from Triassic strata. No new fulgoroids are described but problems associated with the determination of fulgoroid venation are discussed. The genus Actinoscytim Tillyard is transferred from the Homoptera to the Heteroptera and together with three new genera ascribed to a new family, the Actinoscytinidae. The family Ipsviciidae, formerly regarded as belonging to the Homoptera is also removed to the Heteroptera. The family Dunstaniidae is reviewed in the light of a re-examination of type specimens. Fossil fragments, poorly-preserved specimens, and wings of uncertain position which have at some time been referred to the Homoptera, are listed, and some are discussed. Possible derivations and interrelationships of the various major groups of Homoptera are indicated by means of a chart.


Author(s):  
Yana V. Malkova ◽  

This article employs the semantic and motivational aspects to study three Russian dialect words, namely Pskov and Tver Regions посви́рывать ‘to be picky, to disdain’, Kaluga Region ко́бзовать ‘to disdain’, Don, Volgograd, Ryazan, and Tambov Regions скабе́жливый ‘squeamish’. The choice to refer specifically to these linguistic facts is determined by the fact that some of the lexical units presented have not been previously discussed in literature, while, in the author’s opinion, some have controversial etymological solutions. The author states that the word посви́рывать has the root -вир-. Here, the idea of turning is recognised as a motivationally significant one since it reflects popular observations of the behaviour of a person who rejects something. Thus, the axiological assessment of squeamish behavior is fixed in the word’s inner form. The author connects the word ко́бзовать with кобызиться ‘to act arrogantly; to be stubborn, to be obstinate’, where быз indicates ‘a whiny, capricious child’. An assumption is made that a number of lexical units, such as Vologda Region бзли́вый ‘spoiled, capricious’, Perm Region скобы́чка ‘a quarreler and a mean person’, etc. belong to the same family. The author builds potential lines of their semantic and motivational development. The family includes designations of character traits (arrogance, boastfulness, foppery, cockiness, quick temper, cunningness) and human behaviour (such ideograms as ‘to cry’, ‘to frown’, ‘to be angry’, ‘to take offense’). The author hypothesises that the lexical unit скабежливый also refers to the family of the -быз- root. This conclusion is made based on phonetic variation in the root (скабе́зливый, скабы́зливый, скобызко́й) and the similarity in the development of meaning for all the lexical units studied (also, they share the semantics of arrogance, sensitivity, and tearfulness).


2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 50-57
Author(s):  
M.A. Gruzdeva ◽  
◽  
O.N. Kalachikova ◽  

the article presents an analysis of the economic foundations of the variability of models of generative behavior of Russian men. A hypothesis of research is a connection between the contribution to the material support of the family and the implementation of parenting functions, supported by reasons that are objective from the point of view of the family and causing the preservation of patriarchal stereotypes when building parent-matrimonial relations. The information base of the study was a qualitative sociological study on the generative behavior of men conducted in the Vologda region and the Republic of Tatarstan in 2019. A typology of models of behavior of modern fathers are proposed, depending on their contribution to the material support of the family, five types typical for complete families are distinguished. The developed typology is a hypothesis, it will be studied during a mass survey of men with using economic and mathematical methods.


2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
NINA D. SINITSHENKOVA

The mayfly sister group family Misthodotidae Tillyard, 1932 includes two genera: Misthodotes Sellards, 1909 and Triassodotes Sinitshenkova & Papier, 2005. Misthodotes species have so far been known only from the Permian, six Early Permian species have been described from North America (Carpenter, 1933, 1979; Tillyard, 1932, 1936), one from Germany (Kinzelbach & Lutz, 1984) and two from the Perm region of Russia (Tshernova, 1965). Only three species are known from the Upper Permian deposits: two from the famous Isady locality in the Vologda Region of Russia (Sinitshenkova, 2013; Sinitshenkova & Vassilenko, 2012) and one from the Urals (Novokshonov et al., 2002). The only Triassodotes species was found in the Middle Triassic Grès à Voltzia deposits in France (Sinitshenkova et al., 2005).


Richly fossiliferous deposits have been found in the Ischigualasto region of Argentina in the last few years. The only known dicynodont from this area is the new genus Ischigualastia , of which a diagnosis and fully illustrated description are given. A specimen from Brazil, which had earlier been referred to the genus Stahleckeria as S. lenzii , is shown to be very similar to Ischigualastia , but not generically identical with it; this specimen is therefore placed in the new genus Barysoma . The only South American dicynodont which had previously been fully described is Stahleckeria , from Brazil. A diagnosis and fully illustrated description are now given of the complete skeleton of the genus Dinodontosaurus , also from Brazil. Earlier Brazilian material which had been referred to the African genus Dicynodon is shown to belong to Dinodontosaurus . A very large skull from the same deposits is identical with Dinodontosaurus , except that it has a much more massive snout and tusks, and a wider occiput. The dicynodonts are herbivorous, and may well have lived in herds; it is suggested that the massive skull may belong to the old male of such a herd of Dinodontosaurus , and it is therefore not given separate taxonomic status. The skull of Placerias , the only dicynodont known from North America, had previously been restored by Camp & Welles (1956) from the broken remains of about forty individuals. Comparison of the restored skull with that of Ischigualastia has suggested various modifications in the reconstruction, and illustrations of the new reconstruction are given. The relationships of the Triassic dicynodonts are discussed. It is suggested that, excluding the specialized genus Lystrosaurus , they show two main divergent adaptations, which are probably related to their mode of feeding. A pointed snout and high occiput is thought to characterize the family Kannemeyeriidae (which includes the forms Kannemeyeria, ‘Kannemeyeria’ vanhoepeni, Sinokannemeyeria, Parakannemeyeria, Ischigualastia, Barysoma and Placerias ). A blunt snout and wide occiput is thought to characterize the family Stahleckeriidae (which includes the genera Stahleckeria and Dinodontosaurus ). A similar distinction is found today between the browsing black rhinoceros and the grazing white rhinoceros. The most primitive kannemeyeriids are found in the Lower Triassic of China, and these forms may also be ancestral to the stahleckeriids. The only other Triassic dicynodonts, Shansiodon and ‘ Dicynodon’ njalilus , may be placed in a separate family, the Shansiodontidae. All these Triassic genera have two features in common: the presence of a separately ossified olecranon process on the ulna, and a shortened interpterygoid vacuity. It is possible that this may indicate a common ancestry for them all, but no Upper Permian or Basal Triassic genera now known appear to be possible ancestors for them. The lack of any Middle Triassic vertebrate fauna in the northern hemisphere makes it very difficult to date the Argentinian and Brazilian faunas, which include gomphodont cynodonts, dicynodonts, rhynchosaurs, pseudosuchians and a few saurischians. It is not felt that the presence of rhynchosaurs necessarily indicates a Middle Triassic age, as the group is known from the mid-Norian of India. It is possible that the presence of several saurischians and of a pseudosuchian closely related to the German Norian genus Aëtosaurus , may indicate a Carnian age for the Argentine fauna. The Brazilian fauna is somewhat dissimilar to that of Argentina and contains no genera in common with it; it may therefore be of earlier, Ladinian, age. The fauna of the Manda Beds of East Africa is similar in composition to that of Brazil, but contains no genera in common with it. It also lacks saurischians and includes a dicynodont, Kannemeyeria , that is otherwise typical of the Lower Triassic Cynognathus zone of South Africa. It may therefore be Anisian in age.


2006 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 269-280
Author(s):  
Alex J MacNeil ◽  
Brian Jones

Enigmatic calcareous microfossils that belong to the Ovummuridae Munnecke, Servais, and Vachard, 2000 are present in ten cores through the upper part of the Escarpment Formation and Alexandra Formation in the Hay River area of the Northwest Territories, Canada. These Late Devonian (Frasnian) siliciclastic, mixed carbonate–siliciclastic, and carbonate ramp deposits accumulated on the western margin of Laurussia. Finding ovummurids in these deposits is significant because it provides the first formal documentation that these microorganisms existed in the Devonian and confirms that the stratigraphic range of the family extends from the Lower Silurian to Upper Permian. The microfossils, which are of unknown biological affinity, include Minourella gotlandica, previously known only from Silurian strata, Ovummurus duoportius, and Minourella cameroni sp. nov. The preservation potential of these microfossils was markedly enhanced by thick cement overgrowths, akin to the syntaxial overgrowths that are common on Paleozoic crinoid fragments. The distribution of ovummurids in these ramp deposits is significant because it demonstrates that ovummurids were capable of inhabiting turbid, likely nutrient-enriched marine environments, with significant siliciclastic influx, that were unsuitable for most other carbonate-secreting organisms in the Paleozoic.


1980 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 500-511 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip J. Currie

Acerosodontosaurus piveteaui, a new genus and species of primitive diapsid reptile of the Family Younginidae, is based upon a partial skull and partial skeleton from Upper Permian strata of the République Démocratique de Madagascar. Morphologically, Acerosodontosaurus is closer to Youngina than any other known early diapsid. It can be distinguished from Youngina by a higher maxillary tooth count, a broader skull in the antorbital region, a broader puboischiatic plate, and a longer iliac blade. The type specimen is more mature than known specimens of Youngina, and furnishes anatomical information not reported in other younginid specimens.


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