Description and correlation of Late Ordovician conodonts from the D. ornatus and P. pacificus graptolite zones, Road River Group, northern Yukon Territory

1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (7) ◽  
pp. 1450-1464 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander D. McCracken

Upper Ordovician carbonate beds within clastic strata of the Road River Group, northern Yukon Territory, have yielded 403 conodont elements representing 25 species; 19 of these are illustrated. Genera present are Amorphognathus, Belodina, Besselodus, Drepanoistodus, Eocarniodus?, Gamachignathus, Icriodella, Noixodontus, Oulodus, Panderodus s.l., Paroistodus?, Plectodina, Protopanderodus, Pseudobelodina s.l., Scabbardella, Strachanognathus, and Walliserodus. The apparatus of new genus A new species A includes a symmetrical and bifurrowed rastrate element.Sparse conodont faunas from Rock River occur in strata below a level bearing graptolites of the D. ornatus Zone and between this zone and the succeeding P. pacificus Zone. These conodonts have a range of "Trentonian" –Gamachian (upper Caradoc –Hirnantian).The fauna from Blackstone River is from a single bed that is 3 m below the G. persculptus Zone? and 13.7 m above the P. pacificus Zone. Although stratigraphically closer to the former, this fauna may be equivalent to a level within the P. pacificus Zone; the conodonts suggest correlation with the late Richmondian Fauna 12 and the lower G. ensifer Zone of Anticosti Island, Quebec. A similar fauna (G. ensifer Zone) occurs in one horizon within the P. pacificus Zone at upper Peel River. One metre above this is the informal D. cf. D. mirus graptolite biohorizon (P. pacificus Zone).The Blackstone and Peel faunas equate to a level within the Ordovician Anceps bands C and D of the Ordovician–Silurian boundary stratotype at Dob's Linn, Scotland. The interval of Fauna 13 and the Gamachian Stage may correspond to Anceps Band E and the C.? extraordinarius Band (and contiguous strata) at Dob's Linn. The base of the G. ensifer Zone and the higher base of the Gamachian are probably late Rawtheyan.

Author(s):  
Linda Hints ◽  
David A. T. Harper

ABSTRACTTwo Ordovician plectambonitoid genera, Alwynella and Grorudia, occur in drill core sections of Latvia in the East Baltic, and in exposures and loose blocks on the Swedish Island of Öland in the Baltic Sea. The new material confirms differences between the two taxa that are assigned herein to separate families, Alwynellidae fam. nov. and Grorudiidae Cocks & Rong, 1989. In particular, the undercut cardinalia separates Alwynella from Grorudia and indicates its proximity to the sowerbyellids. The genus Grorudia, which is externally similar to Alwynella, is more closely related to the palaeostrophomenines. A new species Grorudia morrisoni sp. nov. is established in the East Baltic. The specimens from Öland are included tentatively within the genus Grorudia due to lack of interiors. Both Alwynella and Grorudia were confined to deeper-water facies in the Baltic palaeobasin, within successions ranging in age from latest Mid (late Llanvirn) to earliest Late Ordovician (mid Caradoc).


1987 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 643-653 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander D. McCracken ◽  
Alfred C. Lenz

Ordovician conodont faunas from the fine-grained clastic Road River Group in northern Yukon Territory contain a mixture of species from both warm- and cold-water regions. This group in southwestern Northwest Territories also has mixed faunas, whereas conodonts from the carbonate facies are more characteristic of the warm-water regions.Six conodont associations and biozones are identified from the Yukon. Some, such as the early Llanvirn "Cordylodus" horridus – Spinodus spinatus association, contain reworked elements. The Pygodus serra Zone (middle–late Llanvirn) is within the upper P. tentaculatus Zone and well below the G. euglyphus Zone. Genera include Ansella, Periodon, Protopanderodus, Pygodus, and Walliserodus.At Peel River, conodonts are within the P. pacificus Zone. The Blackstone River conodonts occur above the P. pacificus Zone and below the G. persculptus Zone (?) and include Oulodus rohneri, Plectodina florida, and Noixodontus. Amorphognathus ordovicicus, Gamachignathus ensifer, O. ulrichi, and Plectodina tenuis occur in both faunas. These represent Fauna 12, found in late Richmondian strata, rather than the Gamachian Fauna 13 and are assigned to the G. ensifer Zone; both occurrences of G. ensifer are biohorizons. The C.? extraordinarius and G. persculptus zones are not recognized at Peel and Rock rivers and Tetlit Creek.The Ozarkodina n. sp. A – Icriodella sp. B association occurs at Pat Lake between the G. persculptus Zone (?) and the underlying P. pacificus Zone. The Ozarkodina have a Silurian aspect but must be regarded as Ordovician.The Ordovician–Silurian boundary in the Road River Group of the Yukon is best defined using graptolites because of the rare occurrence of conodonts.


1986 ◽  
Vol 23 (9) ◽  
pp. 1297-1308 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick R. Racheboeuf ◽  
Paul Copper

Chonetes (Eodevonaria) primigenius Twenhofel 1914, from the Vaureal Formation (Ashgill: Richmondian) of Anticosti Island, is chosen as the type species for a new genus, Archeochonetes, the oldest chonetid brachiopod known. Specimens of Archeochonetes from the overlying Ellis Bay Formation (Ashgili: Gamachian, Himantian) are assigned to a new species, A. muirwoodae. A further, as yet unnamed, species of strophochonetid is also described and figured from the Silurian (Llandovery) Jupiter Formation. Detailed external and internal analysis of the shell reveals that the origin of Archeochonetes lies with the Strophomenacea, thus posing a new perspective to the problem of the mono- or polyphyletic origin of the chronetaceans.


1972 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 297-318 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rolf Ludvigsen

The late Early Devonian succession in northern Yukon Territory contains a well-preserved dacryoconarid tentaculite fauna dominated by Turkestanella acuaria (Richter) in the upper part of the Road River Formation and T. acuaria and Nowakia parabarrandei Churkin and Carter in the overlying Michelle Formation. Based on the dacryoconarid tentaculite fauna the bulk of the Michelle Formation in the Ogilvie to Hart Rivers area is dated as late Pragian (early Emsian), and based on the graptolite and dacryoconarid tentaculite fauna the uppermost Road River Formation in the Blackstone River area is dated as Pragian (early Emsian or late Siegenian or both). The appearance of species of Nowakia in northern Yukon considerably earlier than in Bohemia is documented. It is concluded that some genera of the Dacryoconarida were influenced in their occurrence by environmental factors. New species described are Turkestanella minuta, Viriatellina michellensis, Guerichina lenini, Styliolina blackstonensis, and Metastyliolina conica.


2002 ◽  
Vol 76 (2) ◽  
pp. 246-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiří Frýda ◽  
Robert B. Blodgett ◽  
Alfred C. Lenz

Two new distinctive families, Crassimarginatidae and Scoliostomatidae, each characterized by unusual gerontic apertural morphotypes, are established on the basis of study of the richly diverse Lower Devonian gastropod fauna of the Road River Formation in the Royal Creek area, Yukon Territory. The Early Devonian genus Crassimarginata Jhaveri, 1969, is transferred from the family Palaeotrochidae and placed, together with the new genus Yukonoconcha, into the new family Crassimarginatidae, which is characterized by a pupiform shell with an explanate outer apertural lip in the gerontic growth stage. The new family Scoliostomatidae unites Devonian gastropod genera (Scoliostoma Braun, 1838; Brilonella Kayser, 1873; Anarconcha Horný, 1964; Eoscoliostoma new genus; Mitchellia Koninck, 1877; and Pseudomitchellia new genus), which are characterized by a distinctive, free, twisted (both outwards and backwards) gerontic final half whorl. More detailed morphological comparison of members of this family has allowed their division into two new subfamilies: the Scoliostomatinae and Mitchelliinae. New genera include Yukonoconcha, Eoscoliostoma, and Pseudomitchellia. The former two genera are represented each by a single new species from Yukon Territory, Yukonoconcha pedderi and Eoscoliostoma norrisi. The latter genus is represented by two species, the type Pseudomitchellia bohemica (Perner) from the Koněprusy Limestone (Pragian) of the Czech Republic and Pseudomitchellia macqueeni new species from Yukon Territory.


Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4966 (1) ◽  
pp. 41-53
Author(s):  
ALEXANDER A. KHAUSTOV ◽  
ALEXANDER V. PETROV ◽  
VASILIY B. KOLESNIKOV

A new genus and species, Unguitarsonemus paradoxus n. gen., n. sp. and a new species, Pseudotarsonemoides peruviensis n. sp. (Acari: Trombidiformes: Tarsonemidae), are described based on phoretic females collected on bark beetles Phloeotribus pilula and Ph. biguttatus, respectively, from Peru. A key to species of the genus Pseudotarsonemoides is provided. 


Taxonomy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 60-68
Author(s):  
Jun Souma ◽  
Shûhei Yamamoto ◽  
Yui Takahashi

A total of 14 species in seven tingid genera have been described from the mid-Cretaceous Burmese (Kachin) amber from northern Myanmar, with very distinct paleofauna. Here, a new species of a new genus, Burmavianaida anomalocapitata gen. et sp. nov., is described from Kachin amber. This new species can be readily distinguished from the other described tingid taxa by the apparently smaller body and the structures of the pronotum and hemelytron. Burmavianaida gen. nov. shares the diagnostic characters with two clades composed of three extant subfamilies (Cantacaderinae + Tinginae) and Vianaidinae and may represent an extinct clade distinct from them. To the best of our knowledge, B. anomalocapitata sp. nov. is the smallest species of Tingidae among over 2600 described species. Our new finding supports the hypothesis of the miniaturization phenomenon of insects in Kachin amber, as suggested by previous studies.


2019 ◽  
Vol 94 (2) ◽  
pp. 273-278
Author(s):  
Björn Kröger ◽  
Juan Carlos Gutiérrez-Marco

AbstractThe order Intejocerida is an enigmatic, short-lived cephalopod taxon known previously only from Early–Middle Ordovician beds of Siberia and the United States. Here we report a new genus, Cabaneroceras, and a new species, C. aznari, from Middle Ordovician strata of central Spain. This finding widens the paleogeographic range of the order toward high-paleolatitudinal areas of peri-Gondwana. A curved conch, characteristic for the new genus, was previously unknown from members of the Intejocerida.UUID: http://zoobank.org/21f0a09c-5265-4d29-824b-6b105d36b791


1936 ◽  
Vol 14d (2) ◽  
pp. 11-14
Author(s):  
M. J. Miller
Keyword(s):  

A new species of trematode is described from the intestine of the stickleback (Eucalia inconstans), and referred to a new genus.


Zootaxa ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 2533 (1) ◽  
pp. 36 ◽  
Author(s):  
SALİH DOĞAN ◽  
GÜLDEM DÖNEL

A new genus, Cryptofavognathus is proposed for two species, Cryptofavognathus afyonensis (Koç & Akyol, 2004) comb. nov. and C. anatolicus sp. nov. The adult female and male of C. anatolicus sp. nov. collected from moss and a bird’s nest are herein described and figured.


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