Biology:Lonchodomas

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Short description: Extinct genus of trilobites

Lonchodomas
Temporal range: Ordovician
Lonchodomas mcgeheei CRF.jpg
L. mcgeheei, Bromide Formation, Oklahoma
Scientific classification e
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Trilobita
Order: Asaphida
Family: Raphiophoridae
Genus: Lonchodomas
Angelin, 1854
Type species
Ampyx rostrata
Species
  • L. rostratus (Sars, 1835)
  • L. carinatus Cooper, 1953
  • L. clavulus Whittington, 1965
  • L. mcgeheei (Decker, 1931) synonym Ampyx mcgeheei
  • L. retrolatus Ross jr. & Barnes, 1967
  • L. suriensis Harrington & Leanza, 1957
  • L. volborthi (Schmidt, 1894) synonym Ampyx volborthi

Lonchodomas is a genus of trilobites, that lived during the Ordovician. It was eyeless, like all raphiophorids, and had a long straight sword-like frontal spine, that gradually transforms into the relatively long glabella. Both the glabellar spine and the backward directed genal spines are subquadrate in section. Lonchodomas has five thorax segments and the pleural area of the pygidium has two narrow furrows. Lonchodomas occurred in what are today Argentina , Canada (Newfoundland), Estonia, Latvia, Norway , Sweden, the Russian Federation (Leningrad Oblast[1]) and the United States (Oklahoma, Virginia).

Distribution

Lonchodomas suriensis, 4 mm long
  • L. carinatus is found in the Upper Ordovician of the United States (Lower Member and Botetourt limestone Member, of the Edinburgh Formation, Shenandoah County, Virginia, 39.0° N, 78.4° W Blackriveran 460.9 - 449.5 Ma)[2]
  • L. clavulus is present in the Middle Ordovician of Newfoundland, Canada (Histiodella kristinae conodont zone, Table Cove Formation; Table Point, "Middle Table Head" and Table Cove).[3]
  • L. mcgeheei is present in the Upper Ordovician of Oklahoma, United States (Bromide Formation, Sandbian).[4]
  • L. retrolatus was collected from the Ordovician of Nevada (Eureka Quartzite, sandy limestone, 60–90 ft above base, Ranger Mountains, Nevada Test Site))[5]
  • L. rostratus is known from the Upper Ordovician of Estonia (Narva open pit, and Lasnamägi, Kukruse Stage, Sandbian) and Latvia (Remte 3 borehole, and Adze 6 borehole, Kukruse Stage, Sandbian).[6]
  • L. suriensis was excavated from the Middle Ordovician of Argentina (Portillo del Cajón, Cerro Morado; Cerro Suri; Puesto El Despacho; Las Pircas; all La Rioja)[7]
  • L. volborthi occurs in the Lower Ordovician of the Russian Federation (Volkhovian level, Syas River, Putilovo and Babino quarries, St.Petersburg region).[1] It was originally described as Ampyx volborthi but assigned to Lonchodomas in 1952 by Steinar Skjeseth.[8]

Description

Like all raphiophorids, Lonchodomas is eyeless. The headshield (or cephalon) and tailshield (or pygidium) are subtriangular in outline. Lonchodomas looks a lot like Ampyx but the glabella is diamond-shaped in outline, and it has a ridge along the midline (it is carinate). The glabella gradually transforms into the spine, which makes it difficult to determine where the spine begins. The long median glabellar spine is subquadrate in section and is directed horizontally forward, from the frontal tip of the glabella. The glabella has 2 pairs of muscle scars. The genal spines are also subquadrate in section. The thorax has 5 segments. The pleural regions of pygidium have 2 pairs of narrow pleural furrows.[9]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 A.V. Krylov (2003). "New data on trilobites from Hecker mud mounds (Ordovician) in the Leningrad region (in Russian)". Vestnik Sankt-Petersburgskogo Universiteta, Seriya Geologiya i Geografiya 3(33):95-96
  2. Whittington, H. B.; I.I. Evitt, W.R. (1953). "Silicified Middled Ordovician trilobites". Geological Society of America Memoirs 59: 1–139. doi:10.1130/mem59-p1.  cited in "73341". http://paleodb.org/?a=basicCollectionSearch&collection_no=73341. 
  3. Whittington, H. B.; Kindle., C.H. (1963). "Middle Ordovician Table Head Formation, western Newfoundland". Geological Society of America Bulletin 74 (6): 745–758. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1963)74[745:mothfw2.0.co;2]. Bibcode1963GSAB...74..745W.  cited in "104800". http://paleodb.org/?a=basicCollectionSearch&collection_no=104800. 
  4. Decker, C.E. (1939). "Genal spine attached to Ampyx (Lonchodomas) mcgeheei". Journal of the Academy of Science: 107–108. http://digital.library.okstate.edu/oas/oas_pdf/v20/p107.pdf. 
  5. Ross, R.J. jr. (1967). "Brachiopods and Trilobites from the Basin Ranges, Western United States". Contributions to Paleontology Geological Survey Professional Paper 523-D. http://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/0523d/report.pdf. 
  6. "Species Lonchodomas rostratus (Sars, 1835)". Tallinn University of Technology, University of Tartu, Finnish Museum of Natural History, Swedish Museum of Natural History. http://fossiilid.info/?id=3497. Retrieved 14 September 2013. 
  7. Harrington, H.J.; Leanza, A.F. (1957). Ordovician trilobites of Argentina. Department of Geology, University of Kansas Special Publication. Lawrence: University of Kansas Press. pp. 1–276.  cited in "Lonchodomas suriensis occurrences listing". Macquarie University. http://paleodb.org/?a=displayCollResults&taxon_no=198580&max_interval=Ordovician&country=Argentina&is_real_user=1&basic=yes&type=view&match_subgenera=1. Retrieved 1 October 2013. 
  8. Steinar Skjeseth, 1952. "On the lower Didymograptus zone (3B) at Ringsaker, and contemporaneous deposits in Scandinavian": Norsk geol. tidsskr., v. 30, p. 138 — 182.
  9. Moore, R. C., ed. (1959), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part O, Arthropoda 1, Trilobita, Boulder, CO & Lawrence, KA: The Geological Society of America & The University of Kansas Press, pp. xix + 560 pp., 415 figs, ISBN 0-8137-3015-5 

Wikidata ☰ Q6669670 entry