Biology:Plutonides

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Short description: Extinct genus of trilobites

Plutonides
Temporal range: Middle Cambrian
~514–497 Ma
P. sedgwickii.jpg
Lectotype cranidium
Scientific classification e
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Trilobita
Order: Redlichiida
Family: Paradoxididae
Genus: Plutonides
Hicks, 1895
Type species
Plutonia sedgwickii
Hicks, 1871
Species
  • P. sedgwickii (Hicks, 1871)
  • Lake, 1935 P.? illingi
Synonyms

Plutonia Hicks, 1871,
non Plutonia Morelet in Stabile, 1864.

Plutonides is a genus of Middle Cambrian trilobite in the family Paradoxididae with species Plutonides sedgwickii and possibly Plutonides? illingi. Several other species and subspecies were at times placed in Plutonides but have subsequently been moved to other genera.

In terms of the Scandinavian Middle Cambrian sequence the genus ranges from the Baltoparadoxides oelandicus Biosuperzone (B. pinus Biosubzone) at the type locality for P. sedwickii on Trwyncynddeiriog headland located 1.3 km (0.81 mi) south-southwest of St David’s Cathedral and 500 m (1,600 ft) east of Porth Clais Harbour - Pen-y-Cyfrwy Member, Newgale Formation,[1] and possibly to middle part of the Mawddachites hicksii Biozone on the Penpleidiau (eastern) Headland of Caerfai Bay south of St David’s in southwest Wales, where P? illingi occurs [Locs. TC-1 & CF-1 of Rees et al.][1]

Type

Plutonia sedgwickii is the type species for the genus[2] and was first described in 1871 as "Plutonia" sedgwickii. However the genus name "Plutonia" had already been used for the Vitrinidae snail genus Plutonia by Morelet in Stabile (1864),[3] and so the new genus Plutonides was coined by Hicks (1895).[4] The species Lectotype is SM A1086, an internal mould of cranidium,.[5][6][1][7]

Species

Paradoxides cf. sedgwickii, described by Smith and White (1963) from the Baltoparadoxides pinus Biosubzone in the upper part of the Purley Shale Formation of Warwickshire, central England[7] was redescribed by Rushton (1966, p. 42, pl. 6, figs. 1-10) [8] as ‘Paradoxidessedgwickii porphyrus. The subspecies has broader palpebral lobes and finer surface granulation than observed in P. sedgwickii sedgwickii.

Vanĕk et al. (1999) [9] described cranidia from the Middle Cambrian of Skrije - Týřovice area in the Czech Republic as Plutonides hicksi, although the specimens illustrated are of a different species to that from Wales. Fletcher (2007) however, has also since established the new subgenus, Paradoxides (Mawddachites), to include P. hicksii as type species.[10] Alvarez et al. (2010) raised Mawddachites to a full genus.[11][12]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Rees, A. J.; Thomas, A. T.; Lewis, M.; Hughes, H. E.; Turner, P (2014). "The Cambrian of SW Wales: Towards a United Avalonian Stratigraphy". Geological Society, London, Memoirs 42: 1–31. doi:10.1144/M42.1. 
  2. Harkness, R.; Hicks, H (1871). "On the ancient rocks of the St David's Promontory, South Wales, and their fossil contents: with descriptions of the new species, by H. Hicks, Esq.". Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 27 (1–2): 384–404. doi:10.1144/GSL.JGS.1871.027.01-02.46. https://zenodo.org/record/2431147. 
  3. Stabile, J., 1864. Mollusques terrestres vivants du Piemont. Atti della Societd italiana di Scienze naturali di Milano, 7: 1-141.
  4. Hicks, H. (1895). "On the genus Plutonides (non Plutonia) from the Cambrian rocks of St. David's.". Geological Magazine Decade 4 (2): 230–231. doi:10.1017/S0016756800121193. Bibcode1895GeoM....2..230H. https://zenodo.org/record/1772196. 
  5. Morris, S. F. (1988). "A Review of British Trilobites, Including a Synoptic Revision of Salter's Monograph". Monograph of the Palaeontographical Society, London 140 (374): 1–316. 
  6. Lake, P. (1935). "A Monograph of the British Cambrian Trilobites". Monograph of the Palaeontographical Society, London 88: 197–224, pls. 26–31, pl. 31, fig. 9. doi:10.1080/02693445.1935.12035634. 
  7. 7.0 7.1 Smith, J.D.D.; White, D.E. (1963). "Cambrian trilobites from the Purley Shales of Warwickshire". Palaeontology 6: 397–407, pl. 58, fig. 9. 
  8. Rushton1966, A. W. A. (1966). "The Cambrian Trilobites from the Purley Shales of Warwickshire.". Monograph of the Palaeontographical Society, London 120 (511): 1. doi:10.1080/25761900.2022.12131699. Bibcode1966MPalS.120....1R. 
  9. Vanĕk, J; Valiček, J.; Vocáč, V. (1999). "Plutonides hicksi (Salter) from the Middle Cambrian of Skrije - Týřovice Area (Czech Republic)". Palaeontologica Bohemiae 6: 36–38. http://media0.webgarden.name/files/media0:4fbaa0c7ac319.pdf.upl/1999%2002.pdf. Retrieved 2015-01-04. 
  10. Fletcher, T. P. (2007). "Correlating the zones of "Paradoxides hicksii" and "Paradoxides davidis" in Cambrian Series 3". Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists 33: 35–56. 
  11. Dies Alvares, M. E.; Rushton, A. W. A.; Gozalao, R.; Pillola, G. L.; Liñan, E.; Ahlberg, P. (2010). "Paradoxides brachyrhachis Linnarsson, 1883 versus Paradoxides mediterraneus Pompeckj, 1901: a problematic determination.". GFF 132 (2, June): 95–104. doi:10.1080/11035897.2010.481363. ISSN 1103-5897. Bibcode2010GFF...132...95D. 
  12. "Plutonides hicksi (Salter, 1864)". http://trilobiti-barrandien.mypage.cz/rubriky/sbirka/kambrium-stredni/plutonides-hicksi-salter-1864. 

Wikidata ☰ Q19840575 entry