info:eu-repo/semantics/article
The gaudryceratid ammonoids from the Upper Cretaceous of the James Ross Basin, Antarctica
Fecha
2019-09Registro en:
Raffi, María Eugenia; Olivero, Eduardo Bernardo; Milanese, Florencia Nidia; The gaudryceratid ammonoids from the Upper Cretaceous of the James Ross Basin, Antarctica; Polish Academy of Sciences. Institute of Paleobiology; Acta Palaeontologica Polonica; 64; 9-2019; 523-542
0567-7920
1732-2421
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Raffi, María Eugenia
Olivero, Eduardo Bernardo
Milanese, Florencia Nidia
Resumen
We describe new material of the Subfamily Gaudryceratinae in Antarctica, including five new species: Gaudryceras submurdochi Raffi and Olivero sp. nov., Anagaudryceras calabozoi Raffi and Olivero sp. nov., Anagaudryceras subcompressum Raffi and Olivero sp. nov., Anagaudryceras sanctuarium Raffi and Olivero sp. nov. and Zelandites pujatoi Raffi and Olivero sp. nov., recorded in Santonian to Maastrichtian deposits of the James Ross Basin. The early-mid Campanian Anagaudryceras calabozoi sp. nov. exhibits a clear dimorphism, expressed by marked differences in the ornament of the adult body chamber. Contrary to the scarcity of representative members of the subfamily Gaudryceratinae in the Upper Cretaceous of other localities in the Southern Hemisphere, the Antarctic record reveals high abundance and diversity of 15 species and three genera in total. This highly diversified record of gaudryceratins is only comparable with the Santonian-Maastrichtian Gaudryceratinae of Japan and Sakhalin, which yields a large number of species of Anagaudryceras, Gaudryceras, and Zelandites. The reasons for a similar, highly diversified record of the Gaudryceratinae in these distant and geographically nearly antipodal regions are not clear, but we argue that they probably reflect a similar paleoecological control.