Full Download Original PDF Communicating For Results A Canadian Students Guide 4th Canadian Edition PDF
Full Download Original PDF Communicating For Results A Canadian Students Guide 4th Canadian Edition PDF
Full Download Original PDF Communicating For Results A Canadian Students Guide 4th Canadian Edition PDF
II. TESTICARDINES
External Characters
It is to this division that the great majority of the Brachiopoda belong; and
the diversity of form, of ornamentation, and of internal characters is
correspondingly greater than in the Ecardines.
A transversely or longitudinally oval shape of shell is the commonest; but
sometimes it is triangular, as in Rhynchonella (Fig. 327), or bilobed, as in
Pygope (= Terebratula diphya). The ventral valve is usually more convex than
the dorsal, and the former may be prolonged into a tube by the accelerated
growth and infolding of the anterior and lateral margins, producing a very
abnormal form (Proboscidella). The external surface of the valves is frequently
ornamented with more or less prominent radiating ribs; and fine concentric
growth-lines are commonly shown, and may be developed into coarse ridges
or wrinkles, particularly in old individuals. The members of the family
Productidae are usually furnished with tubular spines, which are sometimes of
great length, and served to anchor the free shells in the mud, or were twisted
round Crinoid stems and similar objects.
In the ventral valve of many genera there is a median sinus, with a
corresponding fold in the dorsal valve, and rarely vice versâ; sometimes the
fold and sinus are double.
The hinge line is either curved or straight, and the valves are articulated by
means of a pair of “hinge-teeth” (Fig. 329, t) in the ventral valve, which fit into
corresponding sockets in the opposite valve. Some genera have the teeth very
rudimentary, or have lost them altogether. The teeth are frequently supported
by “dental plates,” and the sockets by “socket plates” (e.g. Conchidium, Figs.
324, 325). A few genera with a long hinge line have the whole of it
denticulated (Stropheodonta). In the dorsal valve medianly close under the
hinge line is a shelly protuberance—the “cardinal process”—to which the
diductor muscles are attached. It is sometimes of great length and forked
(Stringocephalus, Fig. 326), or tripartite, or even quadripartite; but in
Rhynchonella and some other genera it is rudimentary.
Fig. 324.—Conchidium
galeatum. Wenlock
Limestone.
Fig. 328.—Terebratula
sella. (Lower
Greensand.) d,
Deltidium; f, foramen.
The dorsal valve in a few cases has its beak perforated by a foramen—the
“visceral foramen.” This foramen is in no way connected with the pedicle
foramen, but points perhaps to the existence in the early Testicardinate genera
of an anal aperture. In Athyris concentrica (Devonian) this foramen is
connected internally with a cylindrical tube, which extends longitudinally to
about one-third the length of the valve. In Centronella the aperture in the
cardinal plate is rounded and complete; and in Strophomena and its allies the
opening lies between the cardinal processes. If this feature is correctly
interpreted, it suggests a retrogression of the group since Palaeozoic times not
only in numbers, but in structure; and other evidence points the same way.
Internal Characters
The interior of the shell is sometimes more or less divided up by septa. A
median septum occurs in one or both valves of many genera as a low ridge or
strongly developed partition (Waldheimia, Fig. 329, ss; and Stringocephalus,
Fig. 326, B, v.s). Conchidium (Fig. 325) has its dental plates of great size, and
uniting to form a V-shaped chamber or “spondylium,” supported by a median
double septum; and by means of these with a pair of septa and the large
socket-plates in the dorsal valve the interior of the shell of this genus is divided
up into several chambers.
The interiors of several other genera are somewhat similarly divided up.
Fig. 331.—Atrypa
reticularis. (Wenlock
Limestone.)
I. Ecardines
Family. Lingulidae
Shell elongated, composed of alternating chitinous and calcareous layers, the
latter of which are perforated. Attached by a pedicle passing between apices of
valves.
Arms have no calcified supports.
(For muscles see Fig. 322.)
Range.—Lower Cambrian to Recent.
Principal Genera.—Lingula, Lingulella, Lingulepis.
Family. Obolidae
Shell varies in shape. Ventral valve provided with pedicular groove or
foramen. Cardinal border thickened. No brachial supports. Shell composed of
alternating chitinous and calcareous layers.
(For muscles see p. 496.)
Range.—Lower Cambrian to Devonian.
Principal Genera.—Obolus, Obolella, Kutorgina, Linnarssonia,
Siphonotreta, Acrotreta, Neobolus.
Family. Discinidae
Shell rounded, valves more or less conical, fixed by pedicle passing through
slit or tubular foramen in ventral valve. No calcified brachial supports. Shell
structure chitino-calcareous.
Range.—Ordovician to Recent.
Principal Genera.—Discina, Orbiculoidea, Trematis.
Family. Craniidae
Shell calcareous, subcircular; fixed by surface of ventral valve; dorsal valve
the larger, depressed-conical. Shell structure punctate.
Four principal muscular scars in each valve, with central triangular
protuberance in ventral valve (see p. 476).
Range.—Ordovician to Recent.
Principal Genus.—Crania.
Family. Trimerellidae
Shell thick, calcareous, inequivalve; beak of ventral valve usually prominent;
rudimentary teeth maybe present; hinge area well developed, with pseudo-
deltidium. In interior of valves muscular platform, “crescent,” and sometimes
sub-umbonal chambers (see p. 494, Fig. 323).
Range.—Ordovician and Silurian; maximum in Wenlock.
Principal Genera.—Trimerella, Monomerella, Dinobolus, Rhinobolus.
II. Testicardines
Family. Productidae
Shell entirely free, or fixed by ventral valve or spines. Concavo-convex, more
or less covered with tubular spines. Hinge line straight. Hinge-teeth absent or
rudimentary.
Cardinal process prominent.
Reniform impressions in dorsal valve.
(For muscular impressions see p. 501, Fig. 333.)
Range.—Silurian to Permian. Genus Productus very characteristic of the
Carboniferous.
Principal Genera.—Productus, Chonetes, Strophalosia, Proboscidella,
Aulosteges.
Family. Strophomenidae
Shell very variable in shape; concavo-convex, plano-convex, or biconvex;
hinge line usually straight; frequently with an area on each valve; foramen may
or may not be present. Shell structure near always punctate. Ventral valve
usually furnished with hinge-teeth; and dorsal valve with cardinal process.
Brachial supports completely absent or very rudimentary.
(For muscular impressions see p. 502, Fig. 334.)
Range.—Wholly Palaeozoic.
Principal Genera.—Orthis, with many sub-genera, Clitambonites,
Skenidium, Strophomena, Orthothetes, Leptaena, Stropheodonta,
Plectambonites.
Family. Koninckinidae
Shell plano-convex or concavo-convex. Brachial apparatus composed of two
lamellae spirally enrolled in the same plane, or in the form of depressed cones,
with the apices directed into the ventral valve.
Range.—Silurian to Lias.
Principal Genera.—Koninckina, Koninckella, Coelospira, Davidsonia.
Family. Spiriferidae
Shell biconvex. Brachial apparatus consisting essentially of two descending
calcareous lamellae which by spiral enrolment form a pair of laterally-directed
cones (Fig. 330).
Range.—Chiefly Palaeozoic, but a few forms pass up into the Lias.
Principal Genera.—Spirifera, Cyrtia, Uncites, Athyris, Merista.
Family. Atrypidae
Brachial apparatus consists of two descending calcareous lamellae which
bend outwards at the extremity of the crura and are coiled into two spiral cones,
the apices of which either converge towards each other (Glassia) or towards the
dorsal valve (Atrypa, Fig. 332), or diverge towards the dorsal valve (Dayia); shell
structure impunctate.
Range.—Ordovician to Trias.
Principal Genera.—Atrypa, Dayia, Glassia.
Family. Rhynchonellidae
Shell biconvex, hinge line usually curved.
Beak of ventral valve incurved, with foramen.
Calcareous brachial supports reduced to a pair of short curved crura.
The septa, dental and socket plates may be highly developed and divide up
the cavity of the shell into chambers (Stenochisma, Conchidium).
Shell structure fibrous, rarely punctate; muscular impressions as in
Terebratulidae.
Range.—Ordovician to Recent: majority of the genera are Palaeozoic.
Principal Genera.—Rhynchonella (Fig. 327), Stenochisma, Stricklandia,
Conchidium.
Family. Terebratulidae
Shell structure punctate.
Arms supported by a calcareous loop, usually bent back on itself.
(For muscular impressions see p. 502, Figs. 328, 329.)
Beak of ventral valve perforated by foramen, furnished with deltidium.
Range.—Devonian to Recent; maximum development in Mesozoic times.
Principal Genera.—Terebratula, Terebratulina, Waldheimia, Terebratella,
Kingena, Magas, Centronella.
Family. Argiopidae
Large foramen for passage of pedicle. Marginal septa present in both valves.
Calcareous brachial loop follows margin of shell and is more or less fused with
the septa. Shell structure punctate.
Range.—Jurassic to Recent.
Principal Genera.—Argiope, Cistella.
Family. Stringocephalidae
Shell subcircular, punctate. Cardinal process highly developed, bifid. Brachial
apparatus composed of two calcareous free lamellae, prolonged at first
downwards, then bent back, upwards and outwards to run parallel to margin of
shell and to unite in front, thus constituting a wide loop.
Range.—Silurian and Devonian.
Sole Genus.—Stringocephalus.
Family. Thecidiidae
Shell usually fixed by beak of ventral valve, plano-convex. Sub-cardinal
apophysis in ventral valve for attachment of occlusors. Marginal septa in dorsal
valve. Calcareous brachial loop more or less fused with shell, and with
calcareous spicules of mantle. Shell structure: inner layer fibrous, outer layer
tubulated.
Range.—Carboniferous to Recent.
Principal Genera.—Thecidium, Oldhamina.