Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-18T05:47:30.788Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Mackenziurus emielityi new species: A new encrinurine (Trilobita) from the Silurian (Wenlock-Ludlow) of Wisconsin and Illinois

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2015

Kenneth C. Gass*
Affiliation:
921-11th Street South, Wisconsin Rapids, WI 54494

Extract

Tripp et al. (1977, p. 862) briefly described a small encrinurine from the Silurian of Wisconsin and Illinois. They refrained from naming this taxon, due to its being “as yet imperfectly known,” referring to the lack of testiferous material, the distortion and abrasion of most of the specimens, and the paucity of known cephalic sclerites. Lateral compression and abrasion of the only known cranidium (Tripp et al., 1997, pl. 114, figs. 8 and 9, from Brookfield, Wisconsin) were severe, but large, sparse tubercles were discernible. Gass et al. (1992) established Mackenziurus lauriae to include this and other material, all from various inter-reef Wenlock-Ludlow Racine Dolomite and Sugar Run Dolomite localities in Wisconsin and Illinois, respectively. All of this material is in the form of internal and external molds in dolomitized calcilutite, and most of the Wisconsin specimens are distorted to varying degrees. Among the material which Gass et al. (1992) introduced was a nonabraded, slightly-distorted cranidium with articulated librigenae (Gass et al., 1992, fig. 5.1-5.3) from the same locality in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, which produced the majority of the other known material, and a complete, enrolled, nondistorted but weathered exoskeleton (Gass et al., 1992, fig. 5.4-5.7) from an unrecorded locality and formation in Grafton, Illinois. Those are only the second and third specimens known to preserve the cranidium. Differences in the rostral plate [inferred to be narrower (tr.) on the Wauwatosa specimen] and glabellar tuberculation (larger and fewer in number on the Grafton and Brookfield specimens) were attributed to intra-specific variation. Due to its superior preservation in contrast to the other cranidiumbearing specimens, and the more complete occurrence data, the Wauwatosa specimen was designated as holotype of Mackenziurus lauriae.

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

Adrain, J. M., and Edgecombe, G. D. 1997. Silurian encrinurine trilobites from the Canadian Arctic. Palaeontographica Canadiana, Number 14, 109 p.Google Scholar
Angelin, N. P. 1855. Paleontologia Scandinavica. I: Crustacea formationis transitionis. Fascicule, 2:2192.Google Scholar
Edgecombe, G. D. 1994. New Lower Silurian (Llandovery) encrinurine trilobites from the Mackenzie Mountains, Canada. Journal of Paleontology, 68:824837.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edgecombe, G. D., and Chatterton, B. D. E. 1990. Mackenziurus, a new genus of the Silurian “Encrinurusvariolaris plexus (Trilobita). American Museum Novitates, 2968, 22 p.Google Scholar
Edgecombe, G. D., and Chatterton, B. D. E. 1993. Silurian (Wenlock-Ludlow) encrinurine trilobites from the Mackenzie Mountains, Canada, and related species. Palaeontographica Abt. A, 229:75112.Google Scholar
Edgecombe, G. D., Speyer, S. E., and Chatterton, B. D. E. 1988. Protaspid larvae and phylogenies of encrinurid trilobites. Journal of Paleontology, 62:779799.Google Scholar
Emielity, J. G., and Bradbury, D. P. 1986. List of Silurian trilobites of the United States, Canada, and Greenland. Southern California Paleontological Society, Special Publication 5, 39 p.Google Scholar
Gass, K. C., Edgecombe, G. D., Ramsköld, L., Mikulic, D. G., and Watkins, R. 1992. Silurian Encrinurinae (Trilobita) from the central United States. Journal of Paleontology, 66:7589.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holloway, D. J. 1980. Middle Silurian trilobites from Arkansas and Oklahoma, U.S.A. Palaeontographica Abt. A, 170:185.Google Scholar
Mikulic, D. G. 1979. The paleoecology of Silurian trilobites with a section on the Silurian stratigraphy of southeastern Wisconsin. Unpubl. Ph.D. dissertation, Oregon State University, Corvallis, 864 p.Google Scholar
Munthe, J. 1980. Catalog of fossil type and figured specimens in the Milwaukee Public Museum. Milwaukee Public Museum Contributions in Biology and Geology, 39, 27 p.Google Scholar
Ramsköld, L. 1986. Silurian encrinurid trilobites from Gotland and Dalarna, Sweden. Palaeontology, 29:527575.Google Scholar
Sumpter, P. M., and Meyer, J. J. 1991. Catalog of fossil type and figured specimens in the Milwaukee Public Museum. Milwaukee Public Museum Contributions in Biology and Geology, 82, 46 p.Google Scholar
Tripp, R. P., Temple, J. T., and Gass, K. C. 1977. The Silurian trilobite Encrinurus variolaris and allied species with notes on Frammia. Palaeontology, 20:847867.Google Scholar
Watkins, R. 1991. Guild structure and tiering in a high-diversity Silurian community, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin. Palaios, 6:465478.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whittington, H. B., and Kelly, S. R. A. 1997. Morphological terms applied to Trilobita, p. 313330. In Kaesler, R. L. (ed.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part O, Revised (1). Geological Society of America and the University of Kansas Press, Lawrence.Google Scholar