Published November 19, 2014 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Rouillieria rasile Smirnova, PMO 1975

  • 1. Department of Geology, University of Dayton, Dayton, OH 45469 - 2364, USA. E-mail: msandy 1 @ udayton. edu
  • 2. Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, P. O. Box 1172, NO- 0318 Oslo, Norway. & Current address: Institute of Paleobiology, Polish Academy of Sciences, ul. Twarda 51 / 55, 00 - 818 Warszawa, Poland.
  • 3. Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, P. O. Box 1172, NO- 0318 Oslo, Norway.
  • 4. School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds LS 2 9 JT, United Kingdom.

Description

Rouillieria aff. rasile Smirnova, 1975

Fig. 8.17–8.20

1975 aff. Rouillieria rasile new species —Smirnova, p. 350, pl. X, fig. 3.

Material and occurrence. Seep 8 (PMO 224.929).

Discussion. One damaged specimen that has a similar outline to the specimen figured by Smirnova (1975). The Spitsbergen specimen has a slightly more shouldered appearance at the hinge line compared to Smirnova’s figured specimen. The long, very wide ventrally concave hinge plates and apparently relatively small crural bases (Smirnova 1975, fig. 8) do point to this species as having internal structures that are atypical of Rouillieria. However, in the diagnosis for Rouillieria Lee et al. (2006, p. 2098) state “outer hinge plates broad”. The diagnosis for the genus also refers to crural bases that form lateral umbonal cavities reaching the valve floor (e.g. serial sections of R. michalkowii in Makridin (1964, fig. 83)). However, these lateral umbonal cavities presumably develop due to secondary shell overgrowth and therefore depend on the growth stage of the sectioned specimen. It is probable that these cavities are more likely to develop in maturing or gerontic individuals (or they may even become infilled with secondary shell material in the latter).

Smirnova described Rouillieria rasile from Chevkino Village, Ryazan Province, Russia and it was recorded from the “Berriasian, Ryazan horizon” (Smirnova 1975, p. 351).

Stratigraphic and geographic distribution. Upper Volgian of Spitsbergen.

Notes

Published as part of Sandy, Michael R., Hryniewicz, Krzysztof, Hammer, Øyvind, Nakrem, Hans Arne & Little, Crispin T. S., 2014, Brachiopods from Late Jurassic-Early Cretaceous hydrocarbon seep deposits, central Spitsbergen, Svalbard, pp. 501-532 in Zootaxa 3884 (6) on page 521, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3884.6.1, http://zenodo.org/record/4951742

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Additional details

References

  • Smirnova, T. N. (1975) Novye terebratulidy berriasa I nizhnego goteriva Russkoi platformy [New Berriasian and lower Hauterivian terebratulids of the Russian Platform]. Paleontologicheskii Zhurnal, 1975 (3), 70 - 82. [In Russian]
  • Lee, D. L., Smirnova, T. N. & Dagys, A. S. (2006) Loboidothyridoidea. In: Kaesler, R. (Ed.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part H (Brachiopoda Revised) 5, The Geological Society of America and The University of Kansas Press, Boulder, Colorado and Lawrence, Kansas, pp. 2082 - 2135.
  • Makridin, V. P. (1964) Brachiopody Iurskikh Otlozhenii Russkoi Platformy i Nekotorykh Prilezhashchikh k nei Oblasti [Jurassic Brachiopoda from the Russian Platform and Certain Adjacent Districts]. Ministerstvo Vysshego i Srednego Spetsialnogo Obrazovaniia USSR, Kharkovskii Gosudarstvennyi Universitet imeni A. M. Gorkogo Nauchno-Issledovatelskii Sektor, Moscow, 394 pp. [In Russian].