Skip to content Skip to navigation

Article: New data on molluscs and their shell microstructures from the Middle Cambrian Gowers Formation, Australia

Publication: Palaeontology
Volume: 53
Part: 1
Publication Date: January 2010
Page(s): 97 135
Author(s): Michael J. Vendrasco, Susannah M. Porter, Artem Kouchinsky, Guoxiang Li and Christine Z. Fernandez
Addition Information

How to Cite

VENDRASCO, M. J., PORTER, S. M., KOUCHINSKY, A., LI, G., FERNANDEZ, C. Z. 2010. New data on molluscs and their shell microstructures from the Middle Cambrian Gowers Formation, Australia. Palaeontology53, 1, 97–135.

Online Version Hosted By

Wiley Online Library
Get Article: Wiley Online Library [Pay-to-View Access] |

Abstract

Numerous new cases of preserved shell microstructure were discovered in molluscs from the Middle Cambrian Gowers Formation (Ptychagnostus atavus/Peronopsis opimus Zone, Floran Stage) in the Georgina Basin, Australia. The new data provide further evidence that, by the Middle Cambrian, molluscan shell microstructures were diverse, and many molluscs had a complex shell with multiple types of shell microstructure. In addition, many new occurrences of laminar microstructures are described herein. For many, the nature of these laminar microstructures is not known, but in three species the microstructure is foliated calcite, and in at least two the microstructure is more likely to have been calcitic semi-nacre, a type of microstructure known in brachiopods and bryozoans but unknown in modern molluscs. This commonality among these three closely related lophotrochozoans underscores a similar mechanism of biomineralization. Moreover, these observations suggest a prevalence of calcite-shelled lineages among molluscs from the Middle Cambrian, a time of calcite seas. In addition, the broad occurrence of laminar, nacre-like microstructures in many of these fossils reveals how widespread these strong (fracture-resistant) microstructures were in Middle Cambrian molluscs. Additionally, a few specimens of Yochelcionella preserve imprints of a bilaterally symmetrical pair of muscle scars. New taxa described here include Corystos thorntoniensis gen. et sp. nov., Yochelcionella snorkorum sp. nov., Yochelcionella saginata sp. nov., and Anhuiconus? agrenon sp. nov.
PalAss Go! URL: http://go.palass.org/5dn | Twitter: Share on Twitter | Facebook: Share on Facebook | Google+: Share on Google+