Huronia (cephalopod)

Huronia is an actinocerid genus included in the Huroniidae along with Discoactinoceras and Huroniella,(Teichert 1964). Huronia is characterized by long siphuncle segments with the free part of the connecting rings only slightly inflated and by a narrow central canal and strongly curved radial canals located in the anterior part of each siphuncle segment

Huronia
Temporal range: UpperOrdovician -Silurian
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Cephalopoda
Subclass: Nautiloidea
Order: Actinocerida
Family: Huroniidae
Genus: Huronia
Stokes (1824) [1][2]

Ancestry

Teichert, (1964) indicated Huronia as being derived from the upper Middle Ordovician Discoactinoceras, whose ancestry lay in the direction of Polydesmia, once considered the prototypical actinocerid. Flower, (1968) on the other hand, showed that Huronia is derived from Actinoceras and split off from Lambeoceras during Red River time, near the start of the Late Ordovician, precluding the inclusion of Discoactinoceras

Distribution

Huronia is known from the Upper Ordovician and Silurian of North America and Greenland. H. arctica and H occidentalis(?) are associated with the Cape Calhoun fauna in Greenland.(Flower 1957) H paulodolata and H munuens come from the Middle Silurian of Michigan (Teichert 1964) H sepata is found in the Shamattawa limestone of Hudson Bay (Flower 1957)

References

  1. Woodward, S. P. (1851). A Manual of the Mollusca; or, A Rudimentary Treatise of Recent and Fossil Shells. 1. p. 16. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  2. Stokes, Charles (1824). "(Title of paper unknown)". Trans. Geol. Soc. 2. i: 203. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  • Flower R.H. 1957, Studies of the Actinocerida. Memoir 2, New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources, Socorro NM.
  • Flower R.H. 1968, The First Great Expansion of the Actinocerids. Part I Memoir 19, New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources, Socorro NM.
  • Teichert, C. 1964, Actinoceroidea (K190) in the Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, vol K, Nautiloidea. Curt Teichert and R.C. Moore Eds. University of Kansas Press and the GSA.
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