Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T13:26:32.185Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Pennsylvanian nuculoids (Bivalvia) from the Ixtaltepec Formation, Oaxaca, Mexico

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2015

Sara A. Quiroz-Barroso
Affiliation:
Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad Universitaria, 04510- México, D. F., México
Maria del Carmen Perrilliat
Affiliation:
Instituto de Geología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad Universitaria, 04510- México, D. F., México

Abstract

Five species of nuculoid bivalves are described from Pennsylvanian outcrops of the Ixtaltepec Formation, Oaxaca, Mexico: Nuculopsis sp., Palaeoneilo sinuosus new species, Paleyoldia sp., Phestia bellistriata, and Phestia sp. have been collected in clastic rocks and in association with other marine invertebrate groups, which represent a peri-reefal environment.

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

Adams, H., and Adams, A. 1854-1858. The genera of recent Mollusca arranged according to their organization. London, John Van Voorst, Volume 2, 661 p.Google Scholar
Bailey, J. B. 1983. Middle Devonian Bivalvia from the Solsville Member (Marcellus Formation), Central New York State. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 174:193325.Google Scholar
Beede, J. W. 1900. Carboniferous invertebrates. Kansas Geological Survey (Report), 6(2), 187 p.Google Scholar
Beede, J. W., and Rogers, A. F. 1899. New and little known pelecypods from the Coal Measures. University of Kansas Quarterly, 8:131134.Google Scholar
Carter, J. G. 1990. Evolutionary significance of shell microstructure in the Palaeotaxodonta, Pteriomorphia and Isofilibranchia (Bivalvia: Mollusca), p. 135296. In Carter, J. G. (ed.), Skeletal Biomineralization: Patterns, Processes and Evolutionary Trends, Volume 1. Van Nostrand Rheinhold, New York.Google Scholar
Chernyshev, B. I. 1939. Tip Myagkotelyye-Molluska, Klass Atlas rukovodyashchikh from iskopayemykh faun SSSR. Sredniy i verkhniy otdely kamennougol'noy sistemy. Leningrad and Moscow, Tsentral'nyy Nauchno-Issledovatel'skiy Geologo-Razvedochnyy Institut, 5:113126. (In Russian)Google Scholar
Chernyshev, B. I. 1951. Semeystvo Ledidae iz kamennougol'nykh otlozheniy SSSR. Akademiya Nauk Ukrainskoy SSR, Kiev, Institut Geologicheskii Nauk Trudy, Seriya Stratigrafiya i Paleontologiya, 2, 40 p. (In Russian)Google Scholar
Chow, M. M. 1951. The Pennsylvanian Mill Creek limestone in Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania Geological Survey Bulletin, G26, 36 p.Google Scholar
Ciriacks, K. W. 1963. Permian and Eotriassic bivalves of the middle Rockies. American Museum of Natural History Bulletin, 125, 100 p.Google Scholar
Conrad, T. A. 1842. Observations on the Silurian and Devonian systems of the United States, with descriptions of new organic remains. Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Journal, 8:228280.Google Scholar
Dall, W. H. 1889. On the hinge of pelecypods and its development, with an attempt toward a better subdivision of the group. American Journal of Science, 38:445462.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Driscoll, E. G. 1965. Dimyarian pelecypods of the Mississippian Marshall Sandstone of Michigan. Palaeontographica Americana, 5:63128.Google Scholar
Gibson, M. A., and Gastaldo, R. A. 1987. Invertebrate paleoecology of the Upper Cliff Coal Interval (Pennsylvanian) Plateau Coal Field, Northern Alabama. Journal of Paleontology, 61:439450.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Girty, G. H. 1903. The Carboniferous Formations and faunas of Colorado. United States Geological Survey Professional Paper, 16, 546 p.Google Scholar
Girty, G. H. 1910. New genera and species of Carboniferous fossils from the Fayetteville Shale of Arkansas. New York Academy of Science Annals, 20:189238.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Girty, G. H. 1911. The fauna of the Moorefield Shale of Arkansas. United States Geological Survey Bulletin, 439, 148 p.Google Scholar
Girty, G. H. 1915. Fauna of the Wewoka Formation of Oklahoma. United States Geological Survey Bulletin, 544, 353 p.Google Scholar
Gray, J. E. 1824. Shells, p. 240256. In Parry, W. E., A Supplement to the Appendix of Captain Parry's Voyage for the Discovery of a North-West Passage, in the Years 1819-1820. London.Google Scholar
Hall, J. 1852. Geology and Paleontology, p. 399414. In Stransbury, H., Exploration and survey of the valley of the Great Salt Lake of Utah. U.S. 32nd Congress Special Session Senate Executive Document, 3.Google Scholar
Hall, J. 1858. Lamellibranchiata of the Coal Measures, p. 715717. In Hall, J. and Whitney, J. D., Report on the Geological Survey of the State of Iowa, embracing the results of investigations made during portions of the years 1855, 1856 and 1857, Volume 1, Part 2 Paleontology. Albany, New York.Google Scholar
Hall, J. 1885. Lamellibranchiata, II. Descriptions and figures of the Dimyaria of the Upper Helderberg, Hamilton, Portage and Chemung groups. New York Geological Survey, Paleontology 5(1):269561.Google Scholar
Hall, J., and Whitfield, R. P. 1869. Preliminary notice of the Lamellibranchiata shells of the Upper Helderberg, Hamilton, and Chemung groups, with others from the Waverly sandstones, 2. New York State Museum, 80 p.Google Scholar
Hoare, R. D. 1961. Desmoinesian Brachiopoda and Mollusca from southwest Missouri. Missouri University Studies 36, 262 p.Google Scholar
Hoare, R. D., Heaney, M. J. III, and Mapes, R. H. 1989. Bivalves (Mollusca) from the Imo Formation Mississippian, (Chesterian) of north-central Arkansas. Journal of Paleontology, 63:582603.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoare, R. D., and Sturgeon, M. T. 1975. Stratigraphic distribution of nuculoid bivalves in the Pennsylvanian of Ohio. Bulletin Société Géologique de Belgique, 84:79100. (1977).Google Scholar
Hoare, R. D., Sturgeon, M. T., and Kindt, E. A. 1979. Pennsylvanian marine Bivalvia and Rostroconchia of Ohio. Ohio Geological Survey Bulletin, 67, 77 p.Google Scholar
Johnson, R. G. 1960. Interspecific Associations in Pennsylvanian Fossil Assemblages. Journal of Geology, 70:3255.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Linnaeus, C. 1758. Systema naturae per regna tria naturae. Edition 10 reformata. Volume 1, Regnum animale. L. Salvii, Holmiae, 824 p.Google Scholar
Lintz, J. Jr. 1958. The Fauna of the Ames and Brush Creek Shales of the Conemaugh Formation of Western Maryland. Journal of Paleontology, 32:97112.Google Scholar
McAlester, A. L. 1968. Type species of Paleozoic nuculoid bivalve genera. Geological Society of America Memoir, 105, 143 p.Google Scholar
McKerrow, W. S. 1978. The Ecology of Fossils. The Mit Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 383 p.Google Scholar
Meek, F. B. 1871. Lists of Carboniferous fossils from West Virginia; description of new species. West Virginia University Board of Regents Report, 3:6873.Google Scholar
Meek, F. B. 1875. A report on some of the in vertebrate fossils of the Waverly group and coal measures of Ohio. Ohio Geological Survey, 2:269347.Google Scholar
Morningstar, H. 1922. The Pottsville fauna of Ohio. Ohio Geological Survey Bulletin, 25, 312 p.Google Scholar
Moron-Rios, A., and Perrilliat, M. C. 1988. Una especie nueva del género Griffithides Portlock (Arthropoda, Trilobita) del Paleozoico superior de Oaxaca. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Instituto de Geología, Revista 7:6770.Google Scholar
Morse, W. C. 1931. The Pennsylvanian fauna of Kentucky, p. 295348. In Jillson, W. R., An introduction to Kentucky paleontology. Kentucky Geological Survey, 36.Google Scholar
Murphy, J. L. 1966. The Pennsylvanian pelecypod genus Palaeoneilo Hall and Whitfield. Journal of Paleontology, 40:867876.Google Scholar
Newell, N. D. 1969. Classification of Bivalvia, p. N205N218. In Moore, R. C. (ed.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part N, Mollusca 6(1). Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Pantoja-Alor, J. 1970. Rocas sedimentarias paleozoicas de la región centro-septentrional de Oaxaca, p. 6784. In Segura, L. R., and Rodriguez-Torres, T. (eds.), Excursion México-Oaxaca. Sociedad Geológica Mexicana, Libreto-guía, México.Google Scholar
Pantoja-Alor, J., and Robison, R. A. 1967. Paleozoic sedimentary rocks in Oaxaca, Mexico. Science, 157:10331035.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pojeta, J. Jr. 1969. Revision of some of the Girty's invertebrate fossils from the Fayetteville Shale (Mississippian) of Arkansas and Oklahoma-pelecypods. United States Geological Survey Professional Paper, 606-C:C1C24.Google Scholar
Quiroz-Barroso, S. A. 1995. Bivalvos del Carbonífero de Nochixtlán, Oaxaca. Unpubl. Ph.D. dissertation, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Facultad de Ciencias, 86 p.Google Scholar
Runnegar, B., and Pojeta, J. Jr. 1974. Molluscan Phylogeny: The Paleontological Viewpoint. Science, 186:311317.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shimer, H. G., and Shrock, R. R. 1944. Index fossils of North America. John Wiley and Sons, New York, 837 p.Google Scholar
Sour-Tovar, F. 1994. Braquiópodos pensilvánicos del área de Santiago Ixtaltepec, Municipio de Nochixtlán, Oaxaca. Unpubl. M. S. Thesis, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Facultad de Ciencias, 55 p.Google Scholar
Sour-Tovar, F., and Quiroz-Barroso, S. A. 1989. Braquiópodos pensilvánicos (Strophomenida) de la Formación Ixtaltepec, Santiago Ixtaltepec, Oaxaca. Sociedad Mexicana de Paleontología, Revista 2:517.Google Scholar
Stanley, S. M. 1968. Post-Paleozoic Adaptative Radiation of Infaunal Bivalve Molluscs—A Consequence of Mantle Fusion and Siphon Formation. Journal of Paleontology, 42:214229.Google Scholar
Stanley, S. M. 1970. Relation of shell form to life habits of the Bivalvia (Mollusca). Geological Society of America Memoir, 125, 296 p.Google Scholar
Stasek, Ch. R. 1965. Feeding and particle-sorting in Yoldia ensifera (Bivalvia: Protobranchia), with notes on other nuculanids. Malacologia, 2:349366.Google Scholar
Stevens, R. P. 1858. Description of new Carboniferous fossils from the Appalachian, Illinois and Michigan coal-fields. American Journal of Science, 2nd series, 25:258265.Google Scholar
Thomas, H. D. 1928. An Upper Carboniferous fauna from the Amotape Mountains, northwestern Peru. Geological Magazine, 65:146152; 215-234; 289-301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winchell, A. 1862. Descriptions of fossils from the Marshall and Huron groups of Michigan. Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, Proceedings, 33:405430.Google Scholar