On some Mississippian (Carboniferous) brachiopods from neptunian dykes of the Harz Mountains (central Germany)
Different generations of Mississippian neptunian dykes developed in the drowned Iberg–Winterberg Devonian seamount (Harz Mountains, Germany) yielded poorly diverse and generally small-sized brachiopod faunas dominated by spire-bearers (athyridides, spiriferides) and including several homeomorphic sp...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Palaeobiodiversity and palaeoenvironments 2019-09, Vol.99 (3), p.447-475 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Different generations of Mississippian neptunian dykes developed in the drowned Iberg–Winterberg Devonian seamount (Harz Mountains, Germany) yielded poorly diverse and generally small-sized brachiopod faunas dominated by spire-bearers (athyridides, spiriferides) and including several homeomorphic spiriferides. Four limestone levels are distinguished: Erdbach-II Limestone (
Scaliognathus anchoralis
Zone and basal
Pseudognathodus homopunctatus
Zone, late Ivorian and basal early Viséan),
Actinotheca
Limestone (
Pseudognathodus homopunctatus
Zone, Arundian–Holkerian–early Asbian), Goniatite Limestone (
Gnathodus bilineatus
and
Lochriea nodosa
zones, late Asbian–early Brigantian),
Ibergirhynchia
Limestone (
Lochriea nodosa
Zone, early Brigantian). The faunas (dominant cephalopod facies) of the traditional ‘Erdbach Limestone’ in all older literature related to the Iberg–Winterberg Massif are a mixture of the two older horizons (light crinoidal limestones; late Ivorian to early Asbian), of which the age of their fossil content (especially the well-studied trilobites) needs to be revised by conodonts. New spiriferide genera are described, namely
Roemerithyris
gen. nov. and
Felsithyris
gen. nov. with
Spirifer macrogaster
Roemer
1852
and
Felsithyris hercynica
gen. et sp. nov. as type species, respectively. The latter species is the most common element of an almost monospecific assemblage of early–middle Viséan age. Regeneration traces after fish attacks, developed on a spiriferide shell, are illustrated. |
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ISSN: | 1867-1594 1867-1608 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s12549-018-0360-1 |