Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T01:23:01.151Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Crinoids of the Champlainian (Middle Ordovician) Guttenberg Formation—upper Mississippi Valley region

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 May 2016

Dennis R. Kolata*
Affiliation:
Illinois State Geological Survey, 615 East Peabody Drive, Champaign 61820

Abstract

A well-preserved and locally abundant crinoid fauna has been discovered in the lower part of the Champlainian (Middle Ordovician) Glenhaven Member of the Guttenberg Formation in the Upper Mississippi Valley region. The material consists of the dicyclic inadunates Cupulocrinus levorsoni n. sp., C. jewetti (E. Billings) and monocyclic camerate Pycnocrinus gerki n. sp.

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

Billings, E. 1857. New species of fossils from Silurian rocks of Canada. Report for the years 1853–1856. Geological Survey of Canada, p. 245345.Google Scholar
Billings, E. 1859. On the Crinoideae of the Lower Silurian rocks of Canada. Canadian organic remains. Geological Survey of Canada, Decade IV, p. 172.Google Scholar
Brower, J. C. and Veinus, J. 1978. Middle Ordovician crinoids from the Twin Cities area of Minnesota. Bulletins of American Paleontology, 74(304):373506.Google Scholar
Hall, J. 1847. Containing descriptions of the organic remains of the lower middle division of the New York System. Palaeontology of New York, vol. 1. Albany, 339 p.Google Scholar
Kolata, D. R. 1975. Middle Ordovician echinoderms from northern Illinois and southern Wisconsin. Paleontological Society, Memoir 7, 74 p.Google Scholar
Kolata, D. R. 1982. Camerate crinoids, p. 170205. In Sprinkle, J. (ed.), Echinoderm Faunas from the Bromide Formation (Middle Ordovician) of Oklahoma. University of Kansas Paleontologic Contributions, Monograph 1.Google Scholar
Kolata, D. R., Huff, W. D. and Frost, J. K. 1983. Correlation of K-bentonites in the Decorah Subgroup of the Mississippi Valley by chemical fingerprinting, p. F1-F15. In Delgado, D. J. (ed.), Ordovician Galena Group of the Upper Mississippi Valley—Deposition, Diagenesis, and Paleoecology. Guidebook for the 15th Annual Field Conference, Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists, Great Lake Section.Google Scholar
Kolata, D. R. and Jollie, M. 1982. New anomalocystitid mitrates (Stylophora—Echinodermata) from the Champlainian (Middle Ordovician) Guttenberg Formation of the Upper Mississippi Valley region. Journal of Paleontology, 56:631653.Google Scholar
Moore, R. C., Ubaghs, G., Wienberg Rasmussen, H., Breimer, A. and Lane, N. G. 1978. Glossary of crinoid morphological terms, p. T229–T242. In Moore, R. C. and Teichert, C. (eds.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part T, Echinodermata 2. Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Stauffer, C. R. 1935. The conodont fauna of the Decorah Shale (Ordovician). Journal of Paleontology, 9:596620.Google Scholar
Sweet, W. C. 1984. Graphic correlation of Upper Middle and Upper Ordovician rocks, North American Midcontinent Province, U.S.A., p. 2325. In Bruton, D. L. (ed.), Aspects of the Ordovician System. Paleontological Contributions from the University of Oslo, No. 295, Universitetsforlaget.Google Scholar
Sweet, W. C. and Bergström, S. M. 1976. Conodont biostratigraphy of the Middle and Upper Ordovician of the United States Midcontinent, p. 121151. In Basset, M. G. (ed.), The Ordovician System—A Symposium. Palaeontological Association.Google Scholar
Templeton, J. S. and Willman, H. B. 1963. Champlainian Series (Middle Ordovician) in Illinois. Illinois State Geological Survey Bulletin 89, 260 p.Google Scholar
Wachsmuth, C. and Springer, F. 1897. The North American Crinoidea Camerata. Memoirs of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University, volumes 20–21, 897 p.Google Scholar
Webers, G. F. 1966. The Middle and Upper Ordovician conodont faunas of Minnesota. Minnesota Geological Survey, Special Publication, SP-4, 123 p.Google Scholar
Willman, H. B. and Kolata, D. R. 1978. The Platteville and Galena Groups in northern Illinois. Illinois State Geological Survey Circular 502, 75 p.Google Scholar