Acanthodiscus
Acanthodiscus Temporal range: Hauterivian ~133–130 Ma | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Mollusca |
Class: | Cephalopoda |
Subclass: | Ammonoidea |
Order: | Ammonitida |
Superfamily: | Perisphinctaceae |
Family: | Berriasellidae |
Genus: | Acanthodiscus Bruguière, 1779 |
Type species | |
A. radiatus | |
Species | |
See text |
Acanthodiscus is an extinct ammonoid cephalopod genus from the order Ammonitida and included in the persphinctacean family Berriasellidae. The type species, named by Bruguière, 1779, is Acanthodiscus radiatus.
Description
The shell of Acanthodiscus (A. radiatus) is of modest size, slightly more than 14 centimetres (5.5 in) in diameter, coiled with the outer whorl covering about a third of the next inner whorl. The lower (2/3) flanks bear strong, wide spaced, radial ribs with large nodes at either end, and become weaker on the mature body chamber. Outer flanks (approx. 1/3) slope toward a narrow, flat to concave venter lined on either side by a series of smaller nodes. the mature whorl section is higher than wide.
Paleoecology, distribution, and range
Acanthodiscus is found in shallow water sediments in both the Tethyan and Boreal realms where it is used as an index fossil. In fact, the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS) has assigned the First Appearance Datum of Acanthodiscus radiatus, the first species of the genus, as the defining biological marker for the start of the Hauterivian stage of the Cretaceous, ~132.9 million years ago. Acanthodiscus fossils can be found in Argentina's Neuquén Basin. Also in the Macanal Formation of the Eastern Ranges of the Colombian Andes, fossils of Acanthodiscus have been found.[1]
Species
- A. radiatus ; type species
- A. octagonus
- A. ottmeri
- A. rollieri
- A. schmidtii; Found on the Antarctic Peninsula
- A. subradiatus
References
- ↑ Piraquive et al., 2011, p.204
Bibliography
- Piraquive, Alejandro; Juan Sebastián Díaz; Tomas Cuéllar; Germán Pardo, and Andreas Kammer. 2011. Reactivación Neógena de estructuras de rift del Cretácico Temprano asociadas con la Falla de Chámeza, Pajarito, Boyacá (Colombia): evidencias tectónicas y bioestratigráficas. Geología Colombiana 36. 197-216. Accessed 2017-08-04.
External links
- Acanthodiscus-Paleodb
- Acanthodiscus radiatus in French.
- T. Birkelund, et al.: Cretaceous Stage Boundaries - Proposals. Bulletin of the Geological Society of Denmark, vol. 33 1984