Serrodiscus

Serrodiscus Richter and Richter 1941.[1] is a genus of Eodiscinid trilobite belonging to the family Weymouthiidae Kobayashi T. (1943),[2] Order Agnostida (Salter 1864).[3] It lived during the late Lower Cambrian, with remains found in Canada (Newfoundland & Nova Scotia), China (Gansu), The United Kingdom (England), Germany (Silesia), Poland (Holy Cross Mountains), the Russian Federation (Tuva, Gorno-Altayskaya, Kuznetsk Alatau), and the United States (Massachusetts, New York State).[4] It is named for the spines on the ventral side of the pygidium, which give it a serrated impression.

Serrodiscus
Temporal range: Lower Cambrian
pygidia of Serrodiscus silesius
Scientific classification
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Serrodiscus

Richter & Richter, 1941
species
  • S. serratus (Richter & Richter, 1941) (type species) = Eodiscus (Serrodiscus) serratus
  • Serrodiscus silesius Richter & Richter, 1941. S. speciosus
  • (Ford, 1873) [[Synonym <span style="font-style:normal;">(</span>taxonomy<span style="font-style:normal;">)</span>|=]] Microdiscus speciosus. Serrodiscus ctenoa Rushton, 1966.
  • Serrodiscus weymouthioides Fletcher & Theokritoff 2008. = Weymouthia nobilis (Ford, 1872) Serrodiscus Mackenziensis Fritz, 1973.
  • Serrodiscus daedatus Öpik, 1975. Serrodiscus gravestocki Jell, 1990.
  • Serrodiscus areolosus Zhou in Zhou et al., 1982. Serrodiscus subclavatus Rasetti, 1966.
  • Serrodiscus spinulosus Rasetti, 1966. Serrodiscus latus Rasetti, 1966.
Synonyms

Paradiscus

Fletcher & Theokritoff (2008) [5] designated Shaw’s (1950, pl. 79, fig. 24) [6] specimen of “ Weymouthia nobilis (Ford, 1872)” [7] as the holotype of a new species, Serrodiscus weymouthioides, and considered Runcinodiscus Rushton (in Bassett et al., 1976) [8] [= ?Weymouthia nobilis (Ford, 1872)] to be a junior synonym of Serrodiscus. Weymouthia and Runcinodiscus Rushton (in Bassett et al., 1976) had previously been viewed as closely allied with Serrodiscus (e.g, Rushton op. cit., 1976).

Species list

  • Serrodiscus serratus Richter & Richter (1941) - Type species.
  • Serrodiscus silesius Richter & Richter (1941, pl. 1, figs. 11-14; Geyer & Elicki 1995, figs. 3.1-3.9, 5.1, 5.3).
  • Serrodiscus speciosus (Ford, 1872).
  • Serrodiscus bellimarginatus (Shaler & Foerste, 1888).
  • Serrodiscus weymouthioides Fletcher & Theokritoff 2008, = Weymouthia nobilis (Ford, 1872); Rushton (in Bassett et al. 1976, p. 630) reasoned that Weymouthia nobilis (Ford, 1872) is a nomen dubium.
  • Serrodiscus ctenoa Rushton, 1966.[9]
  • Serrodiscus Mackenziensis Fritz, 1973.[10]
  • Serrodiscus daedatus Öpik, 1975.[11]
  • Serrodiscus gravestocki Jell, (in Bengston et al., 1990) [12]
  • Serrodiscus areolosus Zhou in Zhou et al., 1982.[13]
  • Serrodiscus subclavatus Rasetti, 1966.[14]
  • Serrodiscus spinulosus Rasetti, 1966.
  • Serrodiscus latus Rasetti, 1966.
  • Serrodiscus griswaldi Rasetti, 1967.[15]

Distribution

  • S. bellimarginatus (Shaler & Foerste, 1888) is known from the Lower Cambrian of Canada (Atdabanian, Callavia broeggeri zone, Branchian Series, St. Mary’s Member, Brigus Formation, Long Cove, Trinity Bay, and Redland Point, St. Mary’s Bay, Newfoundland.[16]
  • S. speciosus (Ford, 1873) has been found in the Lower Cambrian of Poland (Atdabanian, Ocieseki Sandstone and Kamieniec Shale, Holy Cross Mountains).[17] The species also occurs in the Brown’s Pond Formation (“Schodack Formation”), Troy, New York.[18] Type locality for S. speciosus is Rasetti's (1966) locality cs-4 in limestone beds which form several outcrops on a hillside (Griswold Farm) about 1 mile southeast of North Chatham, Columbia County, New York State, USA; the faunule is referred to as the Acimetopus bilobatus faunule from one of the most common and characteristic trilobites. It also occurs in a continuously exposed section of about 250 feet of strata along the New York Central Railroad tracks on the east shore of the Hudson River at Judson Point. About 130 feet of exposed black shale overlie 120 feet of alternating sandstones, shales, sandy or relatively pure limestones, and limestone conglomerates. However, fossil evidence shows that the strata are overturned, with the black shale underlying the sandstone shale-limestone sequence. Fossils occur about 30 - 40 and 75 feet below the top of the shale, and indicate the Lower Cambrian Elliptocephala asaphoides fauna.
  • Serrodiscus ctenoa Rushton, 1966, was recovered from the Purley Shale Formation (c. 450' above base), Protolenus Biozone, of Camp Hill, St. Paul's Church, Stockingford, Nuneaton, Warwickshire, England [Closest ICS interval: Cambrian Series 3 – Terreneuvian Epoch]: Holotype is A 57067, held in the collections of the Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge, England.
  • Serrodiscus silesius Richter & Richter, 1941, Serrodiscus beds of Lusatiops Member, Niederludwigsdorf, near Görlitz, Saxonia, eastern Germany: quarry 1 (material of Schwarzbach 1934.[19] and Richter, & Richter, 1941, and quarry 3 [20]
  • Serrodiscus areolosus Zhou in Zhou et al., 1982, was described rom the Shuangyingshan Formation, Lower Cambrian (Cambrian Series 2) of Dahuoluo, Subei County, northwestern Gansu, China.
  • Serrodiscus subclavatus Rasetti, 1966a, collected from Rasetti's locality cs-4, Griswold Farm, North Chatham, New York State [see S. speciosus (q. v.) for detail].
  • Serrodiscus spinulosus Rasetti, 1966a, collected from Rasetti's locality cs-4, Griswold Farm.
  • Serrodiscus latus Rasetti, 1966a, collected from Rasetti's locality cs-4, Griswold Farm.
  • Serrodiscus griswaldi Rasetti, 1967, collected from Rasetti's locality cs-4, Griswold Farm.

Description

Like all Weymouthiidae, Serrodiscus lacks eyes and facial sutures. The cephalon is semi-elliptical; glabella conical or parallel sided and usually with weak or effaced furrows. Front of glabella does not extend to the anterior furrow; preglabellar field short (sag.) and sometimes separating the genae by a shallow depression. Occipital ring may or may not carry a backward-directed spine. Cephalic border convex, with up to eight pairs of tubercles laterally. Thorax has three segments. The pygidium has a wide, subconical axis with more than eight rings. The pleural fields are extremely weakly furrowed (on internal mould only). Pygidial border becomes narrower towards posterior and usually carries about 8 ventral spines either side.[4]

Behaviour

Serrodiscus could protect its soft underside by enrollment and it has been demonstrated that the ventral spines on the pygidial doublure interlock the nodes on the cephalic border, probably improving defense.

References

  1. RICHTER, R., & RICHTER, E., 1941. Die Fauna des Unter-Kambriums von Cala in Andalusien. Abhandlungen der senckenbergischen naturforschenden Gesellschaft, 455: 90 pp., 83 figs., 4 pls., Frankfurt.
  2. KOBAYASHI T. 1943. Brief notes on the Eodiscids 1, their classification with a description of a new species and a new variety, Proceedings of the Imperial Academy, Tokyo, Volume 19, pp. 37-42.
  3. SALTER, J. W. 1864: On some new fossils from the Lingula-flags of Wales. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London, 20, 233–241.
  4. WHITTINGTON, H. B. (1997). Volume 1 – Trilobita – Introduction, Order Agnostida, Order Redlichiida. Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Part O, Revised. pp. 397–398.
  5. FLETCHER, T. P. & THEOKRITOFF, G., 2008. The Early Cambrian of eastern Massachusetts. Northeastern Geology and Environmental Science, 30, 301-329.
  6. SHAW, A. B., 1950. A revision of several Early Cambrian trilobites from eastern Massachusetts. Journal of Paleontology, 24, 577-590.
  7. FORD, S. W., 1872. Descriptions of some new species of primordial fossils. American Journal of Science, Series 3, 3, 419-422.
  8. BASSETT, M. G., OWENS, R. M & RUSHTON, A. W. A., 1976. Lower Cambrian fossils from the Hell’s Mouth Grits, St. Tudwal’s Peninsula, North Wales. Journal of Geological Society of London, 132, 623-644.
  9. RUSHTON, A. W. A. 1966. The Cambrian Trilobites from the Purley Shales of Warwickshire Palaeontographical Society Monographs (1): p. 14, pl. 1, figs. 16 a - c.
  10. FRITZ, W. H., 1973. Medial Lower Cambrian trilobites from the Mackenzie Mountains, northwestern Canada. Geological Survey of Canada Paper 73, 24, 1-43.
  11. ÖPIK, A. A., 1975. Cymbric Vale fauna of New South Wales and Early Cambrian biostratigraphy. Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics, Bulletin 159, 1-78.
  12. BENGTSON, S., CONWAY MORRIS, S., COOPER, B. 1., JELL, P. A and RUNNEGAR, B. R. 1990. Early Cambrian fossils from South Australia. Association of Australian Palaeolltologists, Memoir, 9, 364 pp.
  13. ZHOH Z. Q., LI J. S., QU, X. G. 1982. Trilobita. In Palaeontological Atlas of Northwest China: Shaanxi Gansu and Ningxia. Part 1. Pre-Cambrian to Early Palaeozoic, pp. 215 – 294. Geological Publishing House, Beijing [in Chinese].
  14. RASETTI, F., 1966. New Lower Cambrian trilobite faunule from the Taconic sequence of New York. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 148 (No. 9), 1 - 52, 9 pls.
  15. RASETTI, F., 1967. Lower Cambrian trilobite faunule from the Taconic sequence of New York. Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, 152 (No. 4), 1 - 111, 14 pls.
  16. LANDING, E. (1995). "Upper Placentian-Branchian series of mainland Nova Scotia (middle-upper Lower Cambrian) faunas, paleoenvironments, and stratigraphic revision". Journal of Paleontology. 69 (3): 475–495. doi:10.1017/S0022336000034879. cited on Phil Borkow. "NeR loc., Branchian Series, Brigus Fm, 59.0m above Ner Sect. base - Landing 1995". Fossilworks.
  17. ORLOWSKI, S. (1975). "Jednostki litostratygraficzne kambru i gornego prekambru Gor Swietokrzyskich [Cambrian and Upper Precambrian lithostratigraphic units in the Holy Cross Mountains]". Acta Geologica Polonica. 25 (3): 431–448. cited on Uta Merkel. "Holy Cross Mountains, Ocieseki Sandstone". Fossilworks.
  18. WESTROP S. R. & LANDING E. 2012. Lower Cambrian (Branchian) eodiscoid trilobites from the lower Brigus Formation, Avalon Peninsula, Newfoundland, Canada. Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists 1 (42) : 209-262.
  19. SCHWARZBACH, M. 1934. Uber die systematische Stellung der Trilobitengattung Protolenus G. F. Matth. - Centralblatt fiir Mineralogie, Geologie und Paläontologie (B) 1934 (5): 233-239, 4 figs., Stuttgart.
  20. GEYER G. and ELICKI O. 1995. The Lower Cambrian trilobites from the Görlitz Synclinorium (Germany) — review and new results, Paläontologische Zeitschrift 69 (1) : 87-119.
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