Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T22:52:01.774Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Cretaceous and Paleocene pleurotomariid (Gastropoda: Vetigastropoda) fauna of Seymour Island, Antarctica

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2015

M. G. Harasewych
Affiliation:
1Department of Invertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, PO Box 37012, Washington, DC 20013-7012,
Anton Oleinik
Affiliation:
2Department of Geosciences, Florida Atlantic University, 777 Glades Road, Boca Raton, FL, 33431-0991,
William Zinsmeister
Affiliation:
3Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Purdue University, 1397 Civil Engineering Building, West Lafayette, IN 47907-1397,

Abstract

Leptomaria antipodensis and Leptomaria hickmanae are described from the Upper Cretaceous [Maastrichtian] Lopez de Bertodano Formation, Seymour Island, and represent the first Mesozoic records of the family Pleurotomariidae from Antarctica. Leptomaria stillwelli, L. seymourensis, Conotomaria sobralensis and C. bayeri, from the Paleocene [Danian], Sobral Formation, Seymour Island, are described as new. Leptomaria larseniana (Wilckens, 1911) new combination, also from the Sobral Formation, is redescribed based on better-preserved material. The limited diversity of the pleurotomariid fauna of Seymour Island is more similar to that of the Late Cretaceous faunas of Australia and New Zealand in terms of the number of genera and species, than to the older, more diverse faunas of South America, southern India, or northwestern Madagascar, supporting the status of the Weddelian Province as a distinct biogeographic unit. The increase in the species richness of this fauna during the Danian may be due to the final fragmentation of Gondwana during this period.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Andersson, G. L. 1906. On the geology of Graham Land. University of Uppsala Geological Institute Bulletin, 7:1971.Google Scholar
Arakawa, Y., Nakano, D., Tsukuda, O., and Hoshino, T. 1978. On faecal pellets and food habits of emperor slit shell, Mikadotrochus hirasei (Pilsbry). Venus, 37:116120.Google Scholar
Askin, R. A. 1988. Campanian to Paleocene palynological succession of Seymour and adjacent islands, northeastern Antarctic Peninsula, p. 131162. In Feldmann, R. M. and Woodburne, M. O. (eds.), Geology and Paleontology of Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula. Geological Society of America Memoir 169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Askin, R. A. 1989. Endemism and heterochroneity in the Late Cretaceous (Campanian) to Paleocene palynofloras of Seymour Island, Antarctica: implications for origins, dispersal and paleoclimates of southern floras, p. 107119. In Crame, J. A. (ed.), Origins and Evolution of the Antarctic Biota. Geological Society Special Publication 47, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Batten, R. L. 1958. Permian Gastropoda of the southwestern United States. 2. Pleurotomariacea: Portlockiellidae, Phymatopleuridae and Eotomariidae. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 114(2):153246.Google Scholar
Collignon, M. 1949. Recherches sur les Faunes Albiennes de Madagascar. I. L'Albien d'Ambaramininga. Annales Géologiques du Service des Mines, Madagascar 16:1128, 22 pls.Google Scholar
Cox, L. R. 1959. Diagnoses of two new genera of Mesozoic Pleurotomariidae. Proceedings of Malacological Society of London, 33:238.Google Scholar
Cuvier, G. and Brongniart, A. 1822. Description géologique des environs de Paris. Paris. [6] viii, 428, 17 pls., 2 maps.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Darragh, T. A. and Kendrick, G. W. 1994. Maastrichtian Scaphopoda and Gastropoda from the Miria Formation, Carnavaron Basin, northwestern Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum, Supplement No. 48:1121.Google Scholar
Das, S. S., Bardhan, S., and Kase, T. 2005. The new pleurotomariid gastropods assemblage from the Jurassic sequence of Kutch, western India. Paleontological Research, 9:329346.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elliot, D. H. and Trautman, T. A. 1982. Lower Tertiary strata on Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula, p. 287297. In Craddock, C. (ed.), Antarctic Geosciences, University of Wisconsin Press, Madison.Google Scholar
Eudes-Deslongchamps, J. A. 1849. Mémoire sur les Pleurotomaires des terrains secondaires du Calvados. Mémoires de la Société linnéenne de Normandie, 8:1151, 18 pls.Google Scholar
Feldmann, R. M., Casadío, S., Chirino-Gálvez, L., and Aguirre-Urreta, M. 1995. Fossil Decapod Crustaceans from the Jagüel and Roca Formations (Maastrichtian-Danian) of the Neuquén Basin, Argentina. Memoir (The Paleontological Society), 43:122. Supplement to Vol. 69, no. 5 of the Journal of Paleontology.Google Scholar
Feruglio, E. 1936. Palaeontographica Patagonica. Descrizione dei Fossili. I. Lago Argentino. 1. Titoniano e Infracretaceo della regione del Lago Argentino. Memorie dell' Istituto Geologico della R. Università di Padova 11:1192, 20 pls.Google Scholar
Gründel, J. 2003. Gastropoden aus dem Bajocium und Bathonium von Sengenthal und Kinding, Franken (Süddeutschland). Zitteliana. Reihe A, Mitteilungen der Bayerischen Staatssammlung für Paläontologie und Geologie, 43:4591.Google Scholar
Hall, S. A. 1977. Cretaceous and Tertiary dinoflagellates from Seymour Island, Antarctica. Nature, 267:239241.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harasewych, M. G. 2002. Pleurotomarioidean Gastropods. Advances in Marine Biology, 42:237294, pls. 5, 6.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harasewych, M. G., Askew, T., and Pompom, S. 1988. Spongivory in Pleurotomariid Gastropods. The Nautilus, 102(3):9298.Google Scholar
Harasewych, M. G. and Kiel, S. 2007. Upper Jurassic Pleurotomariidae (Gastropoda) from southwestern Madagascar. The Nautilus, 121:7689.Google Scholar
Hardwood, D. M. 1988. Upper Cretaceous and lower Paleocene diatom and silicoflagellate biostratigraphy of Seymour Island, eastern Antarctic Peninsula, p. 55129. In Feldmann, R. M. and Woodburne, M. O. (eds.), Geology and Paleontology of Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula. Geological Society of America Memoir 169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hickman, C. S. 1976. Pleurotomaria (Archaeogastropoda) in the Eocene of the northeastern Pacific: A review of the Cenozoic biogeography and ecology of the genus. Journal of Paleontology, 50:10901102.Google Scholar
Hickman, C. S. 1984. Form and function of the radulae of pleurotomariid gastropods. The Veliger, 27:2936.Google Scholar
Huber, B. T. 1984. Late Cretaceous foraminiferal biostratigraphy, paleoecology, and paleobiogeography of the James Ross Island Region, Antarctic Peninsula. Unpublished , , 246 p.Google Scholar
Huber, B. T. 1988. Upper Campanian-Paleocene foraminifera from the James Ross Island region, Antarctic Peninsula, p. 163252. In Feldmann, R. M. and Woodburne, M. O. (eds.), Geology and Paleontology of Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula. Geological Society of America Memoir 169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ihering, H. von. 1907. Les Mollusques Fossiles du Tertiare et du Cretace superieur de l'Argentine. Anales del Museo Nacional de Buenos Aires, Serie III, Tomo VII: 608.Google Scholar
Kanno, S. 1961. Miocene “Pleurotomaria” and its associated fauna from Tochigi Prefecture, Japan. Japanese Journal of Geology and Geography, 32:111118.Google Scholar
Kiel, S. 2006. New and little-known gastropods from the Albian of the Mahajanga Basin, northwestern Madagascar. Journal of Paleontology, 80(3):455476.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knight, J. B., Cox, L. R., Keen, A. M., Batten, R. L., Yochelson, E. L., and Robertson, R. 1960. Gastropoda, Systematic Descriptions, 1169-1310. In Moore, R. C. (ed.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology Part I - Mollusca 1. Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press, Lawrence, xxiii + 351 p.Google Scholar
Kollmann, H. A. 2005. Volume III. Gastropodes Crétacés. (In) Fischer, J. C., Révision critique de la Paléontologie francaise d'Alcide d'Orbigny, Publication dirigee par J. C. Fischer incluant la reedition de l'original. Masson, Paris.Google Scholar
Macellari, C. E. 1984. Late Cretaceous stratigraphy, sedimentology, and macropaleontology of Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation. The Ohio State University, 599 p.Google Scholar
Macellari, C. E. 1986. Late Campanian-Maastrichtian Ammonite fauna from Seymour Island (Antarctic Peninsula). Journal of Paleontology, The Paleontological Society Memoir 18, 55 p.Google Scholar
Macellari, C. E. 1988. Stratigraphy, sedimentology, and paleoecology of Upper Cretaceous/Paleocene shelf-deltaic sediments of Seymour Island, p. 2553. In Feldmann, R. M. and Woodburne, M. O. (eds.), Geology and Paleontology of Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula. Geological Society of America Memoirs 169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Macellari, C. E. and Huber, B. T. 1982. Cretaceous stratigraphy of Seymour Island (East Antarctic Peninsula). Antarctic Journal of the United States, 17(5):6870.Google Scholar
Macellari, C. E. and Zinsmeister, W. J. 1983. Sedimentology and macropaleontology of the Upper Cretaceous to Paleocene sequence of Seymour Island. Antarctic Journal of the United States, Annual Review, 18(5):6971.Google Scholar
Oleinik, A. E. and Zinsmeister, W. J. 1996. Paleocene diversification of bucciniform gastropods on Seymour Island, Antarctica. Journal of Paleontology, 70:923934.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
d'Orbigny, A. 1842-1843. Paléontologie Francaise, description des animaux invertébrés commence par Alcide D'Orbigny continuée sous la direction d'un comité spécial. Terrain Crétacé, Tome Deuxiéme, Gastéropodes. G. Masson, Paris. Text, pp. 1456; Atlas, pls. 149-236. [dating of indivual parts follows Kollmann, 2005, p. 6]Google Scholar
Pacaud, J. M. 2004. Révision des mollusques du Danien (Paléocène inférieur) du Bassin de Paris. 1. Gastropoda : Patellogastropoda et Vetigastropoda (proparte). Geodiversitas, 26:577629.Google Scholar
Pacaud, J.-M. and Merle, D. 2002. Alcide d'Orbigny, un précurseur dans l'étude de la faune du Danien du Bassin de Paris, in Alcide d'Orbigny. 2:Voyageur naturaliste et systématicien. Comptes Rendus Palevol 1 (7), 210 p.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pacaud, J.-M. 2007. Nouveautés nomenclaturales et taxinomiques introduites par Alcide d'Orbigny dans le Prodrome (1850, 1852) pour les espèces du Paléocène et de l'Éocène. Geodiversitas, 29(1):1785.Google Scholar
Palmarczuk, S., Ambrosini, G., Villar, H., Medina, S., Martinez Macchiavello, J. C., and Rinaldi, C. 1984. Las Formaciones Lopez de Bertodano y Sobral en la isla Vicecomodoro Morambio, Antartida. IX Congreso Geologico Argentino, S.C. Bariloche, Actas, 1:399419.Google Scholar
Radley, J. D. 1992. Taxonomy and Palaeoecology of the Portlandian (Upper Jurassic) pleurotomariid gastropod Bathrotomaria rugata (Benett, 1831) from southern England. Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society Proceedings, 114:169174.Google Scholar
Rinaldi, C. A. 1977. About the Upper Cretaceous from the James Ross Island Group. Volume of Abstracts. Third Symposium on Antarctic Geology and Geophysics, 22-27 August, 1977, University of Wisconsin, Madison, 127 p.Google Scholar
Rinaldi, C. A. 1982. The Upper Cretaceous in the James Ross Island Group, p. 281286. In Craddock, C. (ed.), Antarctic Geoscience. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison.Google Scholar
Rinaldi, C. A., Massabie, A., Morelli, J., Roseman, H. L., and Del Valle, R. 1978. Geologia de la isla Vicecomodoro Marambio. Contribuciones Instituto Antartico Argentino 217, 37 p.Google Scholar
Roberts, A. P. 1992. Paleomagnetic constraints on the tectonic rotation of the southern Hikurangi margin, New Zealand. New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 35:311323.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sadler, P. M. 1988. Geometry and stratification of uppermost Cretaceous and Paleogene units on Seymour Island, northern Antarctic Peninsula, p. 303320. In Feldmann, R. M. and Woodburne, M. O. (eds.), Geology and Paleontology of Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula. Geological Society of America, Memoir 169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sharman, G. and Newton, E. T. 1894. Notes on some fossils from Seymour Island in the Antarctic regions obtained by Dr. Donald. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 37(4)30:707709, 1 plate.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sohl, N. F. 1987. Cretaceous Gastropods: Contrasts between Tethys and temperate provinces. Journal of Paleontology, 61(6):10851111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stanton, T. W. 1901. The marine Cretaceous Invertebrates. In: Reports of The Princeton University Expeditions to Patagonia, 1896-1899. Volume IV - Palaeontology, Part I, 43 p.Google Scholar
Stilwell, J. D. and Zinsmeister, W. J. 1992. Molluscan systematics and biostratigraphy, Lower Tertiary La Meseta Formation, Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula. Antarctic Research Series, 55, 192 p.Google Scholar
Stilwell, J. D., Zinsmeister, W. J., and Oleinik, A. E. 2004. Early Paleocene Mollusks of Antarctica: Systematics, Paleoecology and Paleobiogeographic Significance. Bulletin of American Paleontology 367, 89 p.Google Scholar
Stoliczka, F. 1868. Cretaceous Fauna of Southern India. Vol. II. The Gastropoda. Paleontologia Indica. Memoirs of the Geological Survey of India, 498 p, 28 pls.Google Scholar
Weaver, C. E. 1931. Paleontology of the Jurassic and Cretaceous of West Central Argentina. Memoir 1 of the University of Washington, 596 p, 62 pls.Google Scholar
Wilckens, O. 1910. Die Anneliden, Bivalven und Gastropoden der Antarktischen Kreideformation: Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse der Schwedischen Südpolarexpedition 1901-1903, 3(12). Lithographishes Institut des Generalstabs, Stockholm, 132 p.Google Scholar
Wilckens, O. 1911. Die Mollusken der antarktischen Tertiärformation. Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse der Schwedischen Südpolarexpedition, 1901-1903, 3(13), 62 p.Google Scholar
Wilckens, O. 1922. The Upper Cretaceous Gastropods of New Zealand. New Zealand Geological Survey, Paleontological Bulletin 9, 42 p.Google Scholar
Zinsmeister, W. J. 1979. Biogeographic significance of the Late Mesosoic and Early Tertiary Molluscan Faunas of Seymour Island (Antarctic Peninsula) to the Final Breakup of Gondwanaland, p. 349355. In Gray, J., and Boucot, A. J., (eds.), Historical Biogeography, Plate Tectonics, and the Changing Environment, Oregon State University Press, Eugene, Oregon.Google Scholar
Zinsmeister, W. J. 1982a. Review of the Upper Cretaceous-lower Tertiary sequence on Seymour Island. Antarctica. Journal of Geological Society of London, 139(6):779786.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zinsmeister, W. J. 1982b. Late Cretaceous - Early Tertiary molluscan biogeography of the southern Circum- Pacific. Journal of Paleontology, 56(1):8102.Google Scholar
Zinsmeister, W. J. and Feldmann, R. M. 1996. Late Cretaceous faunal changes in the high southern latitudes: a harbinger of biotic global crisis, p. 123139. In Keller, G. and MacLeod, N., Cretaceous-Tertiary Mass Extinctions: Biotic and Environmental Changes, W.W. Norton and Company, New York.Google Scholar
Zinsmeister, W. J. and Macellari, C. E. 1988. Bivalvia (Mollusca) from Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula, p. 253284. In Feldmann, R. M. and Woodburne, M. O. (eds.), Geology and Paleontology of Seymour Island, Antarctic Peninsula. Geological Society of America Memoir 169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zinsmeister, W. J., Feldmann, R. M., Woodburne, M. O., and Elliot, D. H. 1989. Latest Cretaceous/earliest Tertiary transition on Seymour Island, Antarctica. Journal of Paleontology, 63(6):731738.CrossRefGoogle Scholar