Jump to content

Inoceramus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Inoceramus incurvus)

Inoceramus
Temporal range: Early Jurassic-Maastrichtian
~189–66 Ma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Bivalvia
Order: Pteriida
Family: Inoceramidae
Genus: Inoceramus
Sowerby, 1814
Species

See text

Inoceramus (Greek: translation "strong pot") is an extinct genus of fossil marine pteriomorphian bivalves that superficially resembled the related winged pearly oysters of the extant genus Pteria. They lived from the Early Jurassic to latest Cretaceous.[1][2]

Taxonomy

[edit]

The taxonomy of the inoceramids is disputed, with genera such as Platyceramus sometimes classified as subgenus within Inoceramus. Also the number of valid species in this genus is disputed.

Description

[edit]
Halves of a gigantic specimen of I. steenstrupi 187 cm (74 in) across, found on the Nuussuaq Peninsula, Greenland
Weathered shell fragment of the closely related Cremnoceramus difformis, highlighting the orientation and texture of the calcite prisms of the Inoceramids.

Inoceramids had thick shells composed of "prisms" of calcite deposited perpendicular to the surface, and unweathered fossils commonly preserve the mother-of-pearl luster the shells had in life.[3] Most species have prominent growth lines which appear as raised semicircles concentric to the growing edge of the shell.[3]

In 1952, the huge specimen of Inoceramus steenstrupi 187 cm long, was found in Qilakitsoq, the Nuussuaq Peninsula, Greenland. This fossil is 83 Ma old, the Upper Santonian or Lower Campanian stage.[4] Paleontologists suggest that the giant size of some species was an adaptation for life in the murky bottom waters, with a correspondingly large gill area that would have allowed the animal to survive in oxygen-deficient waters.[3]

Selected species

[edit]
  • I. aequicostatus Voronetz, 1937
  • I. albertensis McLearn, 1926
  • I. altifluminis McLearn, 1943
  • I. americanus Walaszczyk & Cobban, 2006
  • I. andinus Wilckens, 1907
  • I. anglicus Woods, 1911
  • I. anilis Pcelinceva, 1962
  • I. anomalus Heine, 1929
  • I. anomiaeformis Feruglio, 1936
  • I. apicalis Woods, 1912
  • I. arvanus Stephenson, 1953
  • I. bellvuensis
  • I. biformis Tuomey, 1854
  • I. brownei Marwick, 1953
  • I. carsoni McCoy, 1865
  • I. comancheanus
  • I. confertim Roemer, 1849[5]
  • I. constellatus Woods, 1904
  • I. corpulentus McLearn, 1926
  • I. coulthardi McLearn, 1926
  • I. cuvieri Sowerby, 1814
  • I. dakotensis
  • I. dominguesi Maury, 1930
  • I. dowlingi McLearn, 1931
  • I. dunveganensis McLearn, 1926
  • I. elburzensis Fantini, 1966
  • I. everesti Oppel, 1862
  • I. fibrosus Meek & Hayden, 1857
  • I. formosulus Voronetz, 1937
  • I. fragilis Haal & Meek, 1856
  • I. frechi Flegel, 1905
  • I. galoi Boehm, 1907
  • I. gibbosus
  • I. ginterensis Pergament, 1966
  • I. glacierensis Walaszczyk & Cobban, 2006
  • I. haast Hochstetter, 1863
  • I. howelli White, 1876
  • I. incelebratus Pergament, 1966
  • I. inconditus Marwick, 1953
  • I. kystatymensis Koschelkina, 1960
  • I. lamarcki Parkinson, 1819
  • I. lateris Rossi de Gargia & Camacho, 1965
  • I. mesabiensis Bergquist, 1944
  • I. morii Hayami, 1959
  • I. multiformis Pergament, 1971
  • I. mytiliformis Fantini, 1966
  • I. nipponicus Nagao & Matsumoto, 1939
  • I. perplexus
  • I. pictus
  • I. pontoni McLearn, 1926
  • I. porrectus Voronetz, 1937
  • I. prefragilis Stephenson, 1952
  • I. proximus'' Tuomey, 1854
  • I. pseudolucifer Afitsky, 1967
  • I. quenstedti Pcelinceva, 1933
  • I. robertsoni Walaszczyk & Cobban, 2006
  • I. saskatchewanensis Warren, 1934
  • I. selwyni McLearn, 1926
  • I. sokolovi Walaszczyk & Cobban, 2006
  • I. steenstrupi de Loriol, 1883
  • I. steinmanni Wilckens, 1907
  • I. subdepressus Meek & Hayden, 1861
  • I. tenuirostratus Meek & Hayden, 1862
  • I. triangularis'' Tuomey, 1854
  • I. undabundus Meek & Hayden, 1862
  • I. undulato Roemer, 1849
  • I. ussuriensis Voronetz, 1937

Distribution

[edit]
The Western Interior Seaway that covered North America during the Cretaceous

Species of Inoceramus had a worldwide distribution during the Cretaceous and Jurassic periods (from 189.6 to 66.043 Ma).[1] Many examples are found in the Pierre Shale of the Western Interior Seaway in North America. Inoceramus can also be found abundantly in the Cretaceous Gault Clay that underlies London. Other locations for this fossil include Vancouver Island,[3] British Columbia, Colombia (Hiló Formation, Tolima and La Frontera Formation, Boyacá, Cundinamarca and Huila),[6] Spain, France, Germany, Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Angola, Antarctica, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada (Alberta, Northwest Territories, Nunavut, Saskatchewan, Yukon), Chile, China, Cuba, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Ecuador, Egypt, Hungary, India, Indian Ocean, Iran, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Jordan, Kenya, Libya, Madagascar, Mexico, Morocco, Mozambique, Nepal, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Nigeria, Papua New Guinea, Peru, Poland, the Russian Federation, Saudi Arabia, Serbia and Montenegro, South Africa, Sweden, Switzerland, Tunisia, Turkey, Turkmenistan, the United Kingdom, United States (Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Delaware, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wyoming), and Venezuela.[1]

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Inoceramus at Fossilworks.org
  2. ^ Ward et al., "Ammonite and inoceramid bivalve extinction patterns in Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary sections of the Biscay region (southwestern France, northern Spain)", Geology, 1991
  3. ^ a b c d Ludvigsen & Beard, 1997, pp. 102–103
  4. ^ "Verdens største musling". 5 March 2020. Archived from the original on 18 August 2022.
  5. ^ Roemer, F. (1849). Texas : mit besonderer Rücksicht auf deutsche Auswanderung und die physischen Verhältnisse des Landes nach eigener Beobachtung. A. Marcus.
  6. ^ Acosta & Ulloa, 2001, p. 41

Bibliography

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • Kennedy, W.J.; Kauffman, E.G.; Klinger, H.C. (1973). "Upper Cretaceous Invertebrate Faunas from Durban, South Africa". Geological Society of South Africa Transactions. 76 (2): 95–111.
  • Klinger, H.C.; Kennedy, W.J. (1980). "Upper Cretaceous ammonites and inoceramids from the off-shore Alphard Group of South Africa". South African Museum. 82 (7): 293–320.
  • Gebhardt, H. (2001). "Inoceramids, Didymotis and ammonites from the Nkalagu Formation type locakity (late Turonian to Coniacian, southern Nigeria): biostratigraphy and palaeoecologic implications". Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie, Monatshefte. 2001 (4): 193–212. doi:10.1127/njgpm/2001/2001/193.
  • El Qot, G.M. (2006). "Late Cretaceous macrofossils from Sinai, Egypt". Beringeria. 36: 3–163.
  • Wild, T. J.; Stilwell, J. D. (2016). "First Cretaceous (Albian) invertebrate fossil assemblage from Batavia Knoll, Perth Abyssal Plain, eastern Indian Ocean: taxonomy and paleoecological significance". Journal of Paleontology. 90 (5): 959–980. Bibcode:2016JPal...90..959W. doi:10.1017/jpa.2016.76.
[edit]