Published October 7, 1998 | Version v1
Journal article Open

A giant new trimerellide brachiopod from the Wenlock (Early Silurian) of New South Wales, Australia

Description

Strusz, D. L., Percival, Ian G., Wright, A. J., Pickett, John W., Byrnes, A. (1998): A giant new trimerellide brachiopod from the Wenlock (Early Silurian) of New South Wales, Australia. Records of the Australian Museum 50 (2): 171-186, DOI: 10.3853/j.0067-1975.50.1998.1278, URL: https://journals.australian.museum/strusz-et-al-1998-rec-aust-mus-502-171186/

Files

source.pdf

Files (4.2 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:209c0d7d2cea6d59c03bd2f39b5fcfb2
4.2 MB Preview Download

Linked records

Additional details

Identifiers

LSID
urn:lsid:plazi.org:pub:FF9C0D7DFFEA6D59C03BFFF39B5FFFB2
URL
http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF9C0D7DFFEA6D59C03BFFF39B5FFFB2

References

  • Boucot, A.J., 1975. Evolution and extinction rate controls. Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. xv + 427.
  • Boucot, A.J., & J.D. Lawson (eds.), in press. Paleocommunities: A case study in the Silurian and Lower Devonian. Cambridge University Press, World and Regional Geology Series, Cambridge.
  • Chatterton, B.D.E., B.D. Johnson & K.S.W. Campbell, 1979. Silicified Lower Devonian trilobites from New South Wales. Palaeontology 22(4): 799 -837.
  • Colquhoun, G.P., E.J. Morgan, N.S. Meakin, O.L. Raymond, M.M. Scott, J.J. Watkins, L.M. Barron, R.G. Cameron, G.A.M. Henderson, E.A. Jagodzinski, J.P. Krynen, D.J. Pogson, A.Y.E. Warren, D. Wyborn & E.K. Yoo, 1997. Dubbo 1:250,000 Geological Sheet SI/5504, preliminary second edition. Geological Survey of New South Wales, Sydney, and Australian Geological Survey Organisation, Canberra.
  • Davidson, T., & W. King, 1872. Remarks on the genera Trimerella, Dinobolus and Monomerella. Geological Magazine 9: 442 -445
  • Goryansky, V.Yu., & L.E. Popov, 1985. Morfologiya, sistematicheskoye polozheniye i proiskhozhdeniye bezzamkovykh brakhiopod s karbonatnoy rakovinoy. [The morphology, systematic position, and origin of inarticulate brachiopods with carbonate shells.] Paleontologicheskiy Zhurnal 1985(3): 3-14.
  • Hall, J., & J.M. Clarke, 1892. An introduction to the study of the genera of Palaeozoic Brachiopoda, part 1. Geological Survey of New York, Palaeontology, vo!. VIII, xvi + 367 pp.
  • Hanken, N.M., & D.A.T. Harper, 1985. The taxonomy, shell structure and palaeoecology of the trimerellid brachiopod Gasconsia Northrop. Palaeontology 28(2): 243-254.
  • Holloway, D.J., 1994. Early Silurian trilobites from the Broken River area, North Queensland. Memoirs of the Museum of Victoria 54: 243-269.
  • Li, L.-Z., 1984. New materials of Ordovician Trimerellidae (Brachiopoda) from western Zhejiang. Acta Palaeontologica Sinica 23: 775-781 (Chinese, with English summary).
  • Li, L.-Z., & N.-R. Han, 1980. Discovery of Ordovician Trimerellidae (Brachiopoda) from western Zhejiang and its significance. Acta Palaeontologica Sinica 19: 8-21 (Chinese, with English summary).
  • Link, A.G., & E.C. Druce, 1972. Ludlovian and Gedinnian conodont stratigraphy of the Yass Basin, New South Wales. Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology & Geophysics, Canberra, Bulletin 134, pp. v + 136.
  • McLean, R., 1975. Silurian rugose corals from the Mumbil area, central new South Wales. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales 99: 181-196.
  • Mergl, M., 1989. Trimerellid brachiopods in the Silurian (WenlocklLudlow) in the Prague Basin (Central Bohemia). Vestnik Usti'edniho ustavu geologickeho 64(5): 267-276.
  • Miller, e.G., & R.J. Aldridge, 1993. The taxonomy and apparatus structure ofthe Silurian distomodontid conodont Coryssognathus Link & Druce, 1972. Journal of Micropalaeontology, 112(2): 241-255.
  • Nikitin, I.F., & L.E. Popov, 1984. Brakhiopody i biostratigrafiya srednego i verkhnego ordovika khrebta Chingiz. Chast n. Brakhiopody bestamakskoy i sargaldakskoy svit (sredniy Ordovik). [Middle and upper Ordovician brachiopods and biostratigraphy of the Chingiz Mountains. Part n. Brachiopods of the Bestamak and Sargaldak suites (middle Ordovician).] Akademiya Nauk Kazakhskoy SSR, Alma-Ata: 121-166.
  • Norford, B.S., 1960. A well-preserved Dinobolus from the Sandpile Group (Middle Silurian) of northern British Columbia. Palaeontology 3(2): 242-244.
  • Norford, B.S., & H.M. Steele, 1969. The Ordovician trimerellid brachiopod Eodinobolus from south-east Ontario. Palaeontology 12(1): 161-171.
  • Owen, M., & D. Wyborn, 1979. Geology and geochemistry of the Tantangara and Brindabella area. Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology & Geophysics, Canberra, Bulletin 204, pp. viii + 52.
  • Percival, 1. G., 1995. Eodinobolus and related trimerellid brachiopods from the Late Ordovician of New South Wales. Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists, 18: 41-60.
  • Percival, I.G., & B.D. Webby, 1996. Island BenthicAssemblages: with examples from the Late Ordovician ofEastern Australia. Historical Biology 11: 171-185.
  • Pollock, S.G., D.A.T. Harper & D. Rohr, 1994. Late Ordovician nearshore faunas and depositional environments, northwestern Maine. Journal of Paleontology 68(5): 925-937.
  • Popov, L.E., M.G. Bassett, L.E. Holmer & I. Laurie, 1993. Phylogenetic analysis of higher taxa of Brachiopoda. Lethaia 26(1): 1-5.
  • Popov, L.E., & T.B. Rukavishnikova, 1986. Novoye semeystvo gigantskikh bezzamkovykh brakhiopod iz verkhnego ordovika Yuzhnogo Kazakhstana. [A new family of gigantic inarticulate brachiopods from the Upper Ordovician of southern Kazakhstan.] Paleontologicheskiy Zhurnal 1986 (1): 56-60.
  • Rhodes, F.H.T., 1953. Some British Lower Palaeozoic conodont faunas. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London, B, 237: 261-334.
  • Rickards, R.B., & A.I. Wright, 1997. Graptolites of the Barnby Hills Shale (Silurian, Ludlow), New South Wales, Australia. Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society 51(3): 209-227.
  • Runnegar, B.N., 1979. Ecology of Eurydesma and the Eurydesma fauna. Alcheringa 3(3-4): 261-285.
  • Simpson, A., 1995. Silurian conodont biostratigraphy in Australia: A review and critique. Courier Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg 182: 325-345.
  • Simpson, A., & J.A. Talent, 1995. Silurian conodonts from the headwaters of the Indi (upper Murray) and Buchan rivers, southeastern Australia, and their implications. Courier Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg 182: 79-215.
  • Strusz, D.L., 1960. The geology of the Parish of Mumbil, near Wellington, N.S.W. Journal & Proceedings of the Royal Society of New South Wales 93: 127-136.
  • Strusz, D.L., 1961. Lower Palaeozoic corals from New South Wales. Palaeontology 4(3): 334-361.
  • Strusz, D.L., 1996. Timescales 3. Silurian. Australian Phanerozoic Timescales, biostratigraphic charts and explanatory notes, second series. Australian Geological Survey Organisation Record 1995/32, pp. 30.
  • Vandyke, A., & I.G. Byrnes, 1976. Palaeozoic succession beneath the Narragal Limestone, Oakdale Anticline near Mumbi!. Records of the Geological Survey of New South Wales 17(2): 123-134.
  • Walley, A.M., D.L. Strusz & A.N. Yeates, 1990. Palaeogeographic Atlas of Australia. Vo!. 3-Silurian. Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology & Geophysics, Canberra, pp. 27.
  • Wang, Y., A.I. Boucot, I.-Y. Rong & X.-C. Yang, 1987. Community ecology as a geologic tool: The Chinese Ashgillian-Eifelian (latest Ordovician through early Middle Devonian) as an example. Geological Society of America, Special Paper 211, pp. 100.
  • Webby, B.D., & I.G. Percival, 1983. Ordovician trimerellacean brachiopod shell beds. Lethaia 16(3): 215-232.
  • Webby, B.D., & V. Semeniuk, 1969. Ordovician halysitid corals from New South Wales. Lethaia 2(4): 345-360.
  • Whiteaves, J.F., 1884. On some new, imperfectly characterized or previously unrecorded species of fossils from the Guelph Formation of Ontario. Geological Survey of Canada, Palaeozoic Fossils 3(1): 1-43.
  • Williams, A., et al., 1965. Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology Part H, Brachiopoda. Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press, Lawrence, 2 vols.
  • Williams, A., S.J. Carlson, H.C. Brunton, L.E. Holmer & L. Popov, 1996. A supra-ordinal classification of the Brachiopoda. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London, Series B, 351: 1171-1193.