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Hypelasma salevensis (FAVRE, 1913) from the Upper Kimmeridgian of the French Jura, and the Origin of the Rudist Family Requieniidae

Item

Title (Dublin Core)

Hypelasma salevensis (FAVRE, 1913) from the Upper Kimmeridgian of the French Jura, and the Origin of the Rudist Family Requieniidae

Description (Dublin Core)

<div>The requieniid rudist species &lsquo;Matheronia&rsquo; salevensis FAVRE, first described from the Tithonian of Mont Sal&egrave;ve, eastern France, is transferred</div><div>to the genus Hypelasma PAQUIER, which is distinguished from Matheronia by possession of a posterior myophoral ledge in the left (attached) valve. Diminutive specimens from the Upper Kimmeridgian</div><div>of the southern Jura are described and placed in this species.</div><div>Hence, Hypelasma salevensis (FAVRE) is the stratigraphically oldest known member of the Family Requieniidae. It may also provide</div><div>another example of phyletic size increase among rudists. Revised diagnoses are given for the family, genus and species.</div><div>The main distinction between the requieniids and the diceratids, from among which they arose, concerns the angle between the coiling axis of the left valve and the commissural plane. In diceratids, this angle is large, such that the often sub-equal umbones tend to twist outwards from the commissural plane, so avoiding mutual interference.</div><div>In requieniids, by contrast, this angle is small, such that the prominent umbo of the left valve tends to coil across the commissural</div><div>plane in trochospiral to helicospiral fashion, while that of the right valve is suppressed in compensation, producing an exogyriform morphology. The requieniid modification of growth geometry, already present in H. salevensis, generated an extended basal surface on the flattened anterior wall of the left valve, implying specialized adaptation</div><div>of these rudists as frictional or attached clingers.</div><div>Requieniid ancestry should be sought among species of the pre-existing diceratid genera Epidiceras or Plesiodiceras, which also attached by the left valve. Although Plesiodiceras is favoured by its already more or less operculiform right valve and relatively small size, the derived condition of its posterior myophoral organisation is problematical. However, its juvenile shell shows some similarity of external form to H. salevensis, suggesting the possibility of paedomorphic</div><div>evolution.</div>

Creator (Dublin Core)

Christian Gourrat
Jean-Pierre Masse
Peter W. Skelton

Subject (Dublin Core)

Requieniidae
Rudists
Taxonomy
Jura
Kimmeridgian
France
Geology
QE1-996.5

Publisher (Dublin Core)

Croatian Geological Survey

Date (Dublin Core)

2003-12-01T00:00:00Z

Type (Dublin Core)

article

Identifier (Dublin Core)

1330-030X
1333-4875
10.4154/GC.2003.09
https://doaj.org/article/8a6a82b37308466eb8587925acac8d46

Source (Dublin Core)

Geologia Croatica, Vol 56, Iss 2, Pp 139-148 (2003)

Language (Dublin Core)

EN

Relation (Dublin Core)

http://www.geologia-croatica.hr/ojs/index.php/GC/article/view/221
https://doaj.org/toc/1330-030X
https://doaj.org/toc/1333-4875

Provenance (Dublin Core)

Journal Licence: CC BY