首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


Two intriguing pluricolumnals (Crinoidea) from the Lower Palaeozoic of Powys and Shropshire
Authors:Stephen K Donovan  Anthony Butcher
Institution:1. Apartment 5, Worsley Point, 251 Worsley Road, Swinton, Manchester, M27 0YE, UK;2. School of Environment, Geography and Geosciences, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, PO1 3QL, UK
Abstract:Complete fossils must be preferred to fragments for most palaeontological studies, but disarticulated specimens are nonetheless potential sources of noteworthy data. Two crinoid pluricolumnals are recorded from the lower Palaeozoic; informed discussion shows each is a basis for palaeobiological interpretation. Both are gracile and are probably belong to disparids. Floricrinus (col.) sp. is from the Silurian of Wenlock Edge, Shropshire, either from the Much Wenlock Limestone Formation (Wenlock) or, more likely, the Lower Elton Formation (Ludlow). This is the first crinoid from the Silurian of the British Isles with a pentapetaloid arrangement of the areola, a geometry common in the Middle-Upper Ordovician and higher in the geologic column. Pluricolumnal gen. et sp. indet. is from the Lower Llanvirn of Powys. One end of the otherwise straight specimen is tightly coiled. This is likely the proxistele, the most flexible region of the column, and the coiling occurred after the crown was lost by autotomy in response to an environmental disturbance.
Keywords:Silurian  Llanvirn  Taphonomy  Palaeoecology  Autotomy
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号