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The late Cenomanian oyster Lopha staufferi (Bergquist, 1944) – the oldest ribbed oyster in the Upper Cretaceous of the Western Interior of the United States

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Lopha staufferi (Bergquist, 1944) is a medium-sized, ribbed, Late Cretaceous oyster with a slightly curved axis and a zigzag commissure; it appears suddenly and conspicuously in upper Cenomanian rocks in the Western Interior Basin of the United States. At maturity, the ribs on both valves thicken into steep flanks that allow the oyster to increase interior volume without increasing its exterior footprint on the seafloor. Lopha staufferi is the first (earliest) ribbed oyster in the Late Cretaceous of the Western Interior, but has no ancestor in the basin. It disappears from the rock record as suddenly as it appeared, leaving no direct descendent in the basin. In the southern part of the basin where it is well constrained, L. staufferi is restricted stratigraphically to the upper Cenomanian Metoicoceras mosbyense Zone (= Dunveganoceras conditum Zone in the north). Lopha staufferi has an unusual paleogeographic distribution, occurring in only two, widely scattered areas in the basin. It has been found at several localities near the western shoreline of the Late Cretaceous Seaway in west-central New Mexico and adjacent Arizona, and in localities 1,900 km (1,200 mi) to the northeast near the eastern shoreline in northeastern Minnesota, but nowhere in between. In west-central New Mexico and adjacent Arizona, L. staufferi is a guide fossil to the Twowells Tongue of the Dakota Sandstone.
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609--626
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Bibliogr. 29 poz., fot., rys., tab.
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  • Atarque Geologic Consulting, LLC, 411 Eaton Avenue, Socorro, NM 87801, USA
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Bibliografia
  • 1. Ayyasami, K. 2006. Role of oysters in biostratigraphy: A case study from the Cretaceous of the Ariyalur area, southern India. Geosciences Journal, 10, 237–247.
  • 2. Bergquist, H.R. 1944. Cretaceous of the Mesabi Iron Range, Minnesota. Journal of Paleontology, 18, 1–30.
  • 3. Cobban, W.A. 1977. Characteristic marine molluscan fossils from the Dakota Sandstone and intertongued Mancos Shale, west-central New Mexico. Professional Paper of the United States Geological Survey, 1009, 24 pp.
  • 4. Cobban, W.A. 1983. Molluscan fossil record from the northeastern part of the Upper Cretaceous Seaway, Western Interior. Professional Paper of the United States Geological Survey, 1253-A, 1–25.
  • 5. Cobban, W.A. and Hook, S.C. 1984. Mid-Cretaceous molluscan biostratigraphy and paleogeography of southwestern part of Western Interior, United States. In: Westermann, G.E.G. (Ed.), Jurassic-Cretaceous biochronology and paleogeography of North America. Special Paper of the Geological Association of Canada, 27, 257–271.
  • 6. Cobban, W.A. and Kennedy, W.J. 1990. Observations on the Cenomanian (Upper Cretaceous) ammonite Calycoceras (Calycoceras) obrieni Young, 1957 from Arizona and New Mexico. Bulletin of the United States Geological Survey, 1881-C, 1–4.
  • 7. Cooper, G.A. 1937. Brachiopod ecology and paleoecology. Report by the Committee on Ecology of the Natural Resources Council, Washington, D.C., 1936, 26–53.
  • 8. Coquand, H. 1869. Monographie du genre Ostrea. Terrain Crétacé. 1–213, J.B. Bailliére & Fils; Paris.
  • 9. Cummins, E.R. 1903. The morphogenesis of Platystrophia. A study of the evolution of a Paleozoic brachiopod. American Journal of Science, 15, 1–48, 121–136.
  • 10. Elder, W.P. 1988. Geometry of Upper Cretaceous bentonite beds: implications about volcanic source area and paleowind patterns, western interior, United States. Geology, 16, 835–838.
  • 11. Haas, O. 1951. Supplementary notes on the ammonite genus Dunveganoceras. Novitates of the American Museum of Natural History, 1490, 1–21.
  • 12. Hook, S.C. 2010. Flemingostrea elegans, n. sp.: guide fossil to marine, lower Coniacian (Upper Cretaceous) strata of central New Mexico. New Mexico Geology, 32, 35–57.
  • 13. Hook, S.C. and Cobban, W.A. 2011. The Late Cretaceous oyster Cameleolopha bellaplicata (Shumard 1860), guide fossil to middle Turonian strata in New Mexico. New Mexico Geology, 33, 67–95.
  • 14. Hook, S.C. and Cobban, W.A. 2012. Evolution of the Late Cretaceous oyster genus Cameleolopha Vyalov 1936 in central New Mexico. New Mexico Geology, 34, 76–95.
  • 15. Hook, S.C. and Cobban, W.A. 2013. The Upper Cretaceous (Turonian) JuanaLopez Beds of the D-Cross Tongue of the Mancos Shale in central New Mexico and their relationship to the Juana Lopez Member of the Mancos Shale in the San Juan Basin. New Mexico Geology, 35, 59–81.
  • 16. Hook, S.C. and Cobban, W.A. 2015. The type section of the Upper Cretaceous Tokay Tongue of the Mancos Shale (new name), Carthage coal field, Socorro County, New Mexico. New Mexico Geology, 37, 27–46.
  • 17. Kauffman, E.G., Sageman, B.B., Kirkland, J.I., Elder, W.P., Harries, P.J. and Villamil, T. 1993. Molluscan biostratigraphy of the Cretaceous Western Interior Basin, North America. In: W.G.E. Caldwell and E.G. Kauffman (Eds), Evolution of the Western Interior Basin. Special Paper of the Geological Association of Canada, 39, 397–434.
  • 18. Kirkland, J.I. 1996. Paleontology of the Greenhorn Cyclothem (Cretaceous: late Cenomanian to middle Turonian) at Black Mesa, northeastern Arizona. Bulletin of the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science, 9, 1–131.
  • 19. Linnaeus, C. 1758. Systema Naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis, 1–824. Laurentius Salvius, Stockholm, edition 10, v. 1.
  • 20. Merewether, E.A. 1983. Lower Upper Cretaceous strata in Minnesota and adjacent areas – time-stratigraphic correlations and structural attitudes. Professional Paper of the United States Geological Survey, 1253-B, 1–52.
  • 21. Rafinesque-Schmaltz, C.S. 1815. Analyse de la nature ou tableau de l’Univers des corps organisés, etc., 1–224. Palmero.
  • 22. Röding, P.E. 1798. Museum Bolteniannum sive catalogus cimeliorum e tribus regnis naturae, quae olim collegerat Joa. Fried. Bolten, 2, 1–199. Typus Johan Christi Trapii; Hamburg.
  • 23. Rudwick, M.J.S. 1964. The function of zigzag deflexions in the commissures of fossil brachiopods. Palaeontology, 7, 135–171.
  • 24. Schmidt, H. 1937. Zur Morphologie der Rhynchonelliden. Senckenbergiana, 19, 22–60.
  • 25. Simpson, G.G. 1940. Mammals and land bridges. Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences, 30, 137–163.
  • 26. Stenzel, H.B. 1971. Oysters: Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Bivalvia, N953–N1224, The University of Kansas and The Geological Society of America; Boulder.
  • 27. Vyalov [Vialov], O.S. 1936. Sur la classification des huîtres. URSS Academy of Sciences, Comptes rendus (Doklady), new series, 4 (13), 1 (105), 17–20.
  • 28. White, C.A. 1884. A review of the fossil Ostreidae of North America; and a comparison of the fossil with the living forms. Report of the Secretary of the Interior of the U. S. 46th Congress, 1st session, 3, (for 1883), 273–308.
  • 29. Williams, G.D. and Stelck, C.R. 1975. Speculations on the Cretaceous paleogeography of North America. In: Westermann, G.E.G. (Ed.), Jurassic-Cretaceous biochronology and paleogeography of North America. Special Paper of the Geological Association of Canada, 13, 1–20.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-2db8eee3-ba33-49a6-907c-c187d8e74e0e
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