Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-lj6df Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-01T21:12:43.718Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Lower Mississippian (Osagean) spire-bearing brachiopods from Cañón de la Peregrina, north of Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas, northeastern México

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 May 2016

Francisco Sour-Tovar
Affiliation:
Museo de Paleontología de la Facultad de Ciencias, UNAM, Ciudad Universitaria, México, DF 04510,
Fernando Álvarez
Affiliation:
Departamento de Geología, Universidad de Oviedo, c/ Arias de Velasco s/n, Oviedo 33005, Spain, ,
María Luisa Martínez Chacón
Affiliation:
Departamento de Geología, Universidad de Oviedo, c/ Arias de Velasco s/n, Oviedo 33005, Spain, ,

Abstract

Brachiopods are common in the lower and middle parts of the early Mississippian (Osagean) Vicente Guerrero Formation that is mainly a fine-grained quartz arenite found in the Ciudad Victoria area, Tamaulipas, northeastern México. This shallow marine brachiopod fauna includes several spire-bearers: Lamellosathyris lamellosa, Cleiothyridina cf. tenuilineata, Camarophorella sp., Alispirifer tamaulipensis n. sp., Tylothyris? sp., Torynifer pseudolineatus, Syringothyris cf. typa, Syringothyris? sp., and Punctospirifer sp. Similar assemblages have been found in Osagean rocks of the Santiago Formation, Oaxaca, southeastern México, and in several coeval formations in the USA: Arizona, Arkansas, Illinois, Ohio, and Texas. North American biogeographic affinities are suggested for these Mississippian faunas of northeastern México. These contrast markedly with the Late Silurian situation, where the Tamaulipas material has Old World Realm, rather than North American, biogeographic affinities. This supports the interpretation that northeastern México was an integral part of North America by the Mississippian, but not in the Late Silurian.

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

Abramov, B. S., and Grigorjeva, A. D.. 1983. Biostratigrafiia i brakhiopody Srednego i Verkhnego Karbona Verkhoian'ia. [Biostratigraphy and brachiopods of the Middle and Upper Carboniferous of Verkhoyansk]. Akademiia Nauk SSSR, 200:1168.Google Scholar
Alvarez, F., and Brunton, C. H. C.. 2001. Fundamental differences in external spine growth in brachiopods, p. 108118. In Brunton, C. H. C., Cocks, L. R., and Long, S. L. (eds.), Brachiopods Past and Present. Taylor and Francis, London, The Systematics Association Special Volume Series, 63:ixii, 1–441.Google Scholar
Alvarez, F., and Rong, J.-Y.. 2002. Order Athyridida, p. 14751601. In Kaesler, R. (ed.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Pt. H, Brachiopoda (revised), 4. The Geological Society of America and The University of Kansas, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Alvarez, F., Rong, J.-Y., and Boucot, A. J.. 1998. The classification of athyridid brachiopods. Journal of Paleontology, 72:827855.Google Scholar
Amos, A. J. 1958. Algunos spiriferacea y terebratulacea (Brach.) del Carbonífero Superior del “Sistema de Teruel,” Provincia de Chubut. Contribuciones Científicas, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Serie Geología, 2:95108.Google Scholar
Amos, A. J. 1979. Guía Paleontológica Argentina. Parte I: Paleozoico. Sección V–Faunas Carbónicas, Sección VI—Faunas Pérmicas. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, Buenos Aires, 158 p.Google Scholar
Berry, W. B. N., and Boucot, A. J.. 1970. Correlation of the North American Silurian rocks. Geological Society of America Special Paper, 102:1289.Google Scholar
Beznosova, G. A., Benediktova, R. N., Sarycheva, G. G., and Sokol'skaya, A. N.. 1962. Tip Brakhiopody [Type Brachiopoda], p. 143184. In Khalfin, L. L. (ed.), Biostratigrafiia paleozoia Saiano-Altaiskoi gornoi oblasti. Tom. III. [Palaeozoic biostratigraphy of Saiano-Altaiskoi mountain area. Vol. III]. Nauchno-Issledovatel'skii Institut Geologii, Geofiziki i Mineralii Syr'ia (SNIIGGiMS) Novosibirsk, Trudy, 21.Google Scholar
Boucot, A. J. 1959. Brachiopods of the Lower Devonian rocks at Highland Mills, New York. Journal of Paleontology, 33:727769.Google Scholar
Boucot, A. J., Blodgett, R. B., and Stewart, J. H.. 1997. European Province Late Silurian brachiopods from the Ciudad Victoria area, Tamaulipas, northeastern México, p. 273293. In Klapper, G., Murphy, M. A., and Talent, J. A. (eds.), Paleozoic Sequence Stratigraphy, Biostratigraphy, and Biogeography: Studies in honor of J. Granville (“Jess”) Johnson. Geological Society of America Special Paper, 321:273–293.Google Scholar
Boucot, A. J., Johnson, J. G., and Staton, R. D.. 1964. On some atrypoid, retzioid and athyridoid Brachiopoda. Journal of Paleontology, 38:805822.Google Scholar
Brunton, C. H. C. 1980. Type specimens of some Upper Palaeozoic Athyridide brachiopods. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Geology Series, 34(4):219234.Google Scholar
Brunton, C. H. C. 1984. Silicified brachiopods from the Viséan of County Fermanagh, Ireland (III). Rhynchonellids, Spiriferids and Terebratulids. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History), Geology Series, 38(2):27130.Google Scholar
Brunton, C. H. C., Alvarez, F., and Mackinnon, D. I.. 1996. Morphological terms used to describe the cardinalia of articulate brachiopods: homologies and recommendations. Historical Biology, 11:941.Google Scholar
Buckman, S. S. 1906. Brachiopod nomenclature: Epithyris, Hypothyris, Cleiothyris Phillips, 1841. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, series 7, 18(107):321327.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Campa-Uranga, M. A., and Coney, P. J.. 1983. Tectono stratigraphic terranes and mineral resource distribution in México. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 20:10401051.Google Scholar
Campbell, K. S. W. 1961. Carboniferous fossils from the Kuttung rocks of New South Wales. Palaeontology, 4:428474.Google Scholar
Carrillo-Bravo, J. 1961. Geología del anticlinorio Huizachal-Peregrina al NW de Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas. Boletín de la Asociación Mexicana de Geólogos Petroleros, 13:198.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. 1967. Mississippian brachiopods from the Chappel Limestone of central Texas. Bulletins of American Paleontology, 53(238):1488.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. 1972. Two new genera of lamellose spiriferacean brachiopods. Journal of Paleontology, 46:729734.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. 1974. New genera of spiriferid and brachythyridid brachiopods. Journal of Paleontology, 48:674696.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. 1987. Lower Carboniferous brachiopods from the Banff Formation of western Alberta. Geological Survey of Canada Bulletin, 378:1183.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. 1990. New brachiopods (Brachiopoda: Articulata) from the Late Osagean of the Upper Mississippi Valley. Annals of Carnegie Museum, 59(3):219247.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L. 1999. Tournaisian (early Osagean) brachiopods from a bioherm in the St. Joe Formation near Kenwood, Oklahoma. Annals of Carnegie Museum, 68(2):91149.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L., and Carter, R. C.. 1970. Bibliography and Index of North American Carboniferous Brachiopods (1898–1968). The Geological Society of America Memoir, 128:1382.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L., Johnson, J. G., Gourvennec, R., and Hou, H.-F.. 1994. A revised classification of the spiriferid brachiopods. Annals of Carnegie Museum, 63:327374.Google Scholar
Carter, J. L., Johnson, J. G., Gourvennec, R., and Hou, H.-F.. 2002. Spiriferida and Spririferinida, p. 3738. In Williams, A., Carlson, S. J., and Brunton, C. H. C., Outline of suprafamilial classification and authorship, p. 3339. In Kaesler, R. (ed.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Pt. H, Brachiopoda (revised), 4. The Geological Society of America and The University of Kansas, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Cisterna, G. A. 1997. Spiriferida (Brachiopoda) en la Formación Las Salinas, Carbonífero Superior, Provincia de Chubut, Argentina. Ameghiniana, 34:155161.Google Scholar
Cooper, G. A. 1944. Phylum Brachiopoda, p. 277365, pls. 105–143. In Shimer, H. W. and Shrock, R. R. (eds.), Index Fossils of North America. John Wiley and Sons, New York.Google Scholar
Cserna, Z. de, and Ortega-Gutiérrez, F.. 1978. Reinterpretation of isotopic age data from the Granjeno Schist, Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas y Reinterpretación tectónica del Esquisto Granjeno de Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas (Respuesta). Revista del Instituto de Geología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 2:212215.Google Scholar
Cserna, Z. de, Graf, J. L. Jr., and Ortega-Gutiérrez, F.. 1977. Alóctono del Paleozoico Inferior en la región de Ciudad Victoria, Estado de Tamaulipas. Revista del Instituto de Geología. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 1:3343.Google Scholar
Cvancara, A. M. 1958. Invertebrate fossils from the Lower Carboniferous of New South Wales. Journal of Paleontology, 32:846888.Google Scholar
Dagys, A. S. 1972. Iavleniia metakhoreza sredi triasovykh spiriferinid [The occurrence of a Metachoresa in Triassic Spiriferida]. Akademiia Nauk SSSR, Sibirskoe Otdelenie, Institut Geologii i Geofiziki, Novosibirsk, Trudy, 11:3444.Google Scholar
Davidson, T. 1859. A Monograph of the British Fossil Brachiopoda, Volume 2, Permian and Carboniferous species. Pt. 5, Number 2. Palaeontographical Society Monograph, London, p. 4980.Google Scholar
Davidson, T. 1863. British Fossil Brachiopoda, Volume 2, Carboniferous. Pt. 5, Number 5. Palaeontographical Society Monograph, London, p. 211280.Google Scholar
Davidson, T. 1881. On genera and species of spiral-bearing Brachiopoda, from specimens developed by the Rev. Norman Glass. Geological Magazine, 8:113.Google Scholar
Denison, R. E., Burke, W. H. Jr., Hetherington, E. A., and Otto, J. B.. 1971. Basement rock framework of parts of Texas, southern New Mexico and northern México, p. 314. In Seewald, K. and Sundee, D. (eds.), The Geologic Framework of the Chihuahua Tectonic Belt. West Texas Geological Society, Midland.Google Scholar
Fastovsky, D. E., Clark, J. M., Stater, N. H., Montellano Ballesteros, M., Hernández Rivera, R., and Hopson, J. A.. 1995. Depositional environments of a Middle Jurassic terrestrial vertebrate assemblage, Huizachal Canyon, México. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 15:561575.Google Scholar
Fredericks, G. 1924. Ussuriiskii verkhnii paleozoi. II. Perskie brakhiopody s Mysa Kalusina. [Upper Paleozoic of the Ussuriland, II: Permian brachiopods of Cape Kalouzin]. Materialy po Geologii i Poleznym Iskopaemym Dal'nego Vostoka, 40:130.Google Scholar
Fredericks, G. 1926. Tablitsa dlya opredeleniia rodov semista Spiriferidae King. [Table for determination of the genera of the family Spiriferidae King]. Akademiia Nauk SSSR, Izvestiia, ser. 6, 20:393422.Google Scholar
Fries, C. Jr., Schmitter, E., Damon, P. E., Livingston, D. E., and Erickson, R.. 1962. Edad de las rocas metamórficas en los Cañones de la Peregrina y de Caballeros, parte centro-occidental de Tamaulipas. Boletín del Instituto de Geología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 64:5569.Google Scholar
Garrison, J. R. Jr. 1978. Reinterpretation of isotopic age data from the Granjeno Schist, Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas. Revista del Instituto de Geología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 2:8789.Google Scholar
Girty, G. H. 1926. A new area of Carboniferous rocks in Mexico. Science, 43(1628):286287.Google Scholar
Hall, J. 1857. Descriptions of new species of Palaeozoic fossils from the Lower Helderberg, Oriskany Sandstone, Upper Helderberg, Hamilton and Chemung Groups. New York State Cabinet of Natural History, 10th Annual Report, Albany, p. 41186.Google Scholar
Hall, J. 1858. Report on the geological survey of the State of Iowa; embracing the results of investigations made during portions of the years 1855–1857, p. 473724, pls. 1–29. In Hall, J. and Whitney, J. D. (eds.), Paleontology. Vol. 1, Pt. 2. State Legislature of Iowa, Des Moines.Google Scholar
Hall, J., and Clarke, J. M.. 1893–1895. An introduction to the study of the genera of Palaeozoic Brachiopoda, Natural History of New York, Palaeontology. Vol. 8, Pt. 2. New York Geological Survey. Charles van Benthuysen and Sons, Albany, xvi + 394 p., pls. 21–84. (Pages 1–317 were published in 1893, pages 318–394 and the plates were published in 1895. The date on the title page is 1894 but the book was not released until early 1895 [see Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Pt. H, Brachiopoda, revised, Volume 4, References, p. 1637–1638])Google Scholar
Heim, A. 1940. The front ranges of the Sierra Madre Oriental, Mexico, from Ciudad Victoria to Tamazunchale. Eclogae Geologicae Helvetiae, 33(2):313352.Google Scholar
Hyde, J. E. 1908. Camarophorella, a Mississippian meristelloid brachiopod. Boston Society of Natural History Proceedings, 34(3):3565.Google Scholar
International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature. 1976. Opinion 1041. Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature, 32(4):210211.Google Scholar
Ivanova, E. A. 1972. Main features of spiriferid evolution (Brachiopoda). Paleontological Journal, 6:309320. [Translated from Paleontologicheskii Zhurnal, 1972 (3):28–42]Google Scholar
Ivanova, E. A. 1981. Morfologiia i razvitie brakhiopod (Nadsemeistvo Paeckelmannellacea). [Brachiopod morphology and evolution (Superfamily Paeckelmannellacea)]. Akademiya Nauk SSSR, Paleontologicheskii Institut, Trudy, 195:154.Google Scholar
Jin, Y.-G., and Fang, R.-S.. 1983. Early Carboniferous brachiopods from Shidian, Yunnan. Acta Palaeontologica Sinica, 22:139152. (In Chinese with English abstract)Google Scholar
Léveillé, C. 1835. Aperçu géologique de quelques localités très riches en coquilles sur les frontières de France et en Belgique. Société géologique de France, Mémoires, 1st ser., 2:2949.Google Scholar
Litvinovich, N. V. 1969. Sopostavlenie opornykh razrezov zapadnoi chasti Tsentral'nogo Kazakhstana s razrezami Karagandinskogo Basseina i Srednei Azii [Correlation of key sections of western part of central Kazakhstan with sections of Karaganda Basin and Central Asia], p. 117448. In Litvinovich, N. V., Akesenova, G. G., and Razina, T. P. (eds.), Stratigrafiya i litologiya otlozhenii Nizhnego Karbona zapadnoi chasti Tsentral'nogo Kazakhstana. [Stratigraphy and lithology of Lower Carboniferous deposits of the western part of central Kazakhstan.] Ministerstvo Geologii Kazakhskoi SSP, Izdatel'stvo “Nedra,” Moscow.Google Scholar
Martínez Chacón, M. L. 1978. Syringothyridacea (Brachiopoda) del Carbonífero de la Cordillera Cantábrica (N de España). Trabajos de Geología, Universidad de Oviedo, 10:317330.Google Scholar
Martínez Chacón, M. L., and Río García, L.. 1987. Cantabriella, nuevo género de Syringothyridacea (Brachiopoda) del Carbonífero cantábrico (N de España). Revista Española de Paleontología, 2:1926.Google Scholar
Maxwell, W. G. H. 1964. The geology of the Yarrol Region, Pt. 1, Biostratigraphy. University of Queensland Papers, Department of Geology, 5:179.Google Scholar
M'Coy, F. 1841. A Catalogue of the Museum of the Geological Society of Dublin. Royal Geological Society of Dublin, Dublin, 28 p.Google Scholar
M'Coy, F. 1844. A Synopsis of the Characters of the Carboniferous Limestone Fossils of Ireland. Printed at the University Press by Gill, M. H., Dublin, p. 1207, pls. 1–29.Google Scholar
Meek, F. B., and Worthen, A. H.. 1860. Descriptions of new Carboniferous fossils from Illinois and other western states. Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Proceedings, serie 2, 12:447472.Google Scholar
Minato, M. 1951. On the Lower Carboniferous fossils of the Kitakami Massif, northeast Honshu, Japan. Journal of the Faculty of Sciences, Hokkaido University, series 4 (Geology and Mineralogy), 7(4):355382.Google Scholar
Muir, J. M. 1936. Geology of Tampico Region, Mexico. Thomas Murby, London. American Association of Petroleum Geologist Special Publication, Tulsa, Oklahoma, 280 p.Google Scholar
Navarro-Santillán, D. 1997. Braquiópodos espiriféridos de la Formación Santiago, Misisípico Inferior en el Municipio de Nochixtlán, Oaxaca. Tesis Profesional, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México D.F., 46 p.Google Scholar
Navarro-Santillán, D., Sour-Tovar, F., and Centeno-García, E.. 2002. Lower Mississippian (Osagean) brachiopods from the Santiago Formation, Oaxaca, México: Stratigraphic and tectonic implications. Journal of South American Earth Sciences, 15:327336.Google Scholar
North, F. J. 1920. On Syringothyris Winchell and certain Carboniferous Brachiopoda referred to Spiriferina d'Orbigny. Geological Society of London Quarterly Journal, 76:162227.Google Scholar
Ortega-Gutiérrez, F. 1978. El Gneis Novillo y rocas metamórficas asociadas en los Cañones del Novillo y de la Peregrina, área de Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas. Revista del Instituto de Geología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 2(1):1930.Google Scholar
Ortega-Gutiérrez, F., López, R., Centeno-García, E., Moran-Zenteno, D., and Gómez-Caballero, A. (eds.). 1993. Pre-Mesozoic basement of NE México, lower crust and mantle xenoliths of central México and northern Guerrero terrane. First Circum-Pacific and Circum-Atlantic Terrane Conference. Instituto de Geología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Guanajuato, México, Guidebook of Field Trip A, 96 p.Google Scholar
Pavlova, E. E. 1969. Razvitie brakhiopod Semeistva Reticulariidae [Evolution of the brachiopod family Reticulariidae]. Akademiya Nauk SSSR, Paleontologicheskii Institut, Trudy, 120:1130.Google Scholar
Phillips, J. 1836. Illustrations of the Geology of Yorkshire: Pt. 2, The Mountain Limestone District. John Murray, London, 253 p.Google Scholar
Phillips, J. 1841. Figures and descriptions of the Palaeozoic fossils of Cornwall, Devon, and West Somerset. Geological Survey of Great Britain Memoir, 1. Longman, London, 231 p.Google Scholar
Poletaev, V. I. 2000. New species of Early Carboniferous and Bashkirian spiriferids of the Donets Basin. Paleontological Journal, 34:3239. [Translated from Paleontologicheskii Zhurnal, 2000(1):31–37]Google Scholar
Ramírez-Ramírez, C. 1992. Pre-Mesozoic geology of Huizachal-Peregrina Anticlinorium, Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas and adjacent parts of eastern México. , , 317 p.Google Scholar
Reynoso, R. V. H., and Clark, J. M.. 1998. A dwarf sphenodontian from the Jurassic La Boca Formation of Tamaulipas, México. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 18:333339.Google Scholar
Roberts, J., Hunt, J. W., and Thompson, D. M.. 1976. Late Carboniferous marine invertebrate zones of eastern Australia. Alcheringa, 1:197225.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rowley, R. R. 1900. Descriptions of new species of fossils from the Devonian and Subcarboniferous [sic] rocks of Missouri. The American Geologist, 25(5):261273.Google Scholar
Rueda, G. J., López Ocampa, E., Dueñas, M. A., and Rodríguez, J. L.. 1993a. Los anticlinorios de Huizachal-Peregrina y de Huayacocotla: dos partes de la Fosa de Huayacocotla-El Alamar. I. El Alogrupo Los San Pedros. Boletín de la Asociación Mexicana de Geólogos Petroleros, 43(1):133.Google Scholar
Rueda, G. J., Dueñas, M. A., Rodríguez, J. L., Minero, M., and Uribe, G.. 1993b. Los anticlinorios de Huizachal-Peregrina y de Huayacocotla: dos partes de la Fosa de Huayacocotla-El Alamar. II. Bioestratigrafía, Cronoestratigrafía y Paleoecología del alogrupo Los San Pedros. Boletín de la Asociación Mexicana de Geólogos Petroleros, 43(2):129.Google Scholar
Ruiz, J., Patchett, P. J., and Ortega-Gutiérrez, F.. 1988. Proterozoic and Phanerozoic basement terranes of Mexico and Nd isotopic studies. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 100:274281.2.3.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sarytcheva, T. G., Sokol'skaya, A. N., Beznosova, G. A., and Maksimova, S. V.. 1963. Brakhiopody i paleogeografiya Karbona Kuznetskoi kotloviny [Carboniferous brachiopods and paleogeography of the Kuznetsk basin]. Akademiya Nauk SSSR, Paleontologicheskii Institut, Trudy, 95:1547.Google Scholar
Schuchert, C. 1929. Classification of brachiopod genera, fossils and recent, p. 1025. In Schuchert, C. and LeVene, C. M. (eds.), Brachiopoda (Generum et Genotyporum Index et Bibliographia). Fossilium Catalogus I: Animalia. Vol. 42. W. Junk, Berlin.Google Scholar
Shaw, A. B. 1962. Rhynchonellid brachiopods and a Torynifer from the Madison Group (Mississippian). Journal of Paleontology, 36:630637.Google Scholar
Silver, L. T., Anderson, H. T., and Ortega-Gutiérrez, F.. 1994. The “thousand million year” orogeny in eastern and southern México. Geological Society of America Abstracts with Programs, 26(7):A48.Google Scholar
Sour-Tovar, F., Quiroz-Barroso, S. A., Centeno-García, E., Navarro Santillán, D., and Ortiz-Lozano, J. A.. 1997. Implicaciones estratigráficas de los invertebrados carboníferos del Municipio de Nochixtlán, Oaxaca. Memorias de la II Convención sobre la Evolución Geológica de México y Recursos Asociados. Pachuca Hidalgo, Instituto de Investigaciones en Ciencias de la Tierra, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Hidalgo-Instituto de Geología, UNAM, México, 3 p.Google Scholar
Sowerby, J. 1815–1818. The Mineral Conchology of Great Britain. Vol. 2. Author, London, p. 1235, pls. 103–203.Google Scholar
Sowerby, J. de C. 1840–1846. The Mineral Conchology of Great Britain. Vol. 7. Author, London, p. 180, pls. 610–648; index, p. 1–11.Google Scholar
Stainbrook, M. A. 1947. Brachiopoda of the Percha Shale of New Mexico and Arizona. Journal of Paleontology, 21:297328.Google Scholar
Stewart, J. H., Blodgett, R. B., Boucot, A. J., Carter, J. L., and López, R.. 1997. Tectonic significance of exotic Mid-Paleozoic rocks near Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas, México. Memorias de la II Convención sobre la Evolución Geológica de México y Recursos Asociados. Pachuca Hidalgo, Instituto de Investigaciones en Ciencias de la Tierra, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Hidalgo-Instituto de Geología, UNAM, México, 2 p.Google Scholar
Stewart, J. H., Blodgett, R. B., Boucot, A. J., Carter, J. L., and López, R.. 1999. Exotic Paleozoic strata of Gondwanan provenance near Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas, México, p. 227252. In Ramos, V. A. and Keppie, J. D. (eds.), Laurentia-Gondwana connections before Pangea. Geological Society of America Special Paper, 336.Google Scholar
Swallow, G. C. 1860. Descriptions of new fossils from the Carboniferous and Devonian of Missouri. Transactions of the St. Louis Academy of Science, 1:635659.Google Scholar
Villaseñor Martínez, A. B., Martínez, C. A., and Contreras, M. B.. 1987. Bioestratigrafía del Paleozoico Superior de San Salvador Patlanoaya, Puebla, México. Revista de la Sociedad Mexicana de Paleontología, 1:390417.Google Scholar
Waagen, W. H. 1883. Salt Range fossils, Volume I, Pt. 4, Productus-Limestone fossils, Brachiopoda. Geological Survey of India Memoir, Palaeontologica Indica, series 13, fasc., 2:391546.Google Scholar
Waterhouse, J. B. 1975. New Permian and Triassic brachiopod taxa. University of Queensland Department of Geology Papers, 7(1):123.Google Scholar
Weller, S. 1906. Kinderhook faunal studies, IV. The fauna of the Glen Park limestone. Academy of Sciences of St. Louis Transactions, 16:435471.Google Scholar
Weller, S. 1914. The Mississippian Brachiopoda of the Mississippi Valley Basin. Illinois State Geological Survey Monograph, 1:1508, 83 pls.Google Scholar
White, C. A. 1865. Description of new species of fossils from the Devonian and Carboniferous rocks of the Mississippi Valley. Boston Society of Natural History Proceedings (1862), 9:833.Google Scholar
White, C. A., and Whitfield, R. P.. 1862. Observations upon the rocks of the Mississippi Valley, which have been referred to the Chemung Group of New York, together with descriptions of new species of fossils from the same horizon at Burlington, Iowa. Boston Society of Natural History Proceedings, 8:289306.Google Scholar
Williams, A., and Brunton, C. H. C.. 1997. Morphological and anatomical terms applied to brachiopods, p. 423440. In Kaesler, R. L. (ed.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Pt. H, Brachiopoda (revised), 1. Introduction. The Geological Society of America and The University of Kansas, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Winchell, A. 1863. Descriptions of fossils of the Yellow sandstones lying beneath the “Burlington Limestone” at Burlington, Iowa. Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia Proceedings, 15(7):225.Google Scholar