Gastropods from the Late Jurassic - Early Cretaceous seep deposits in Spitsbergen, Svalbard
Author
Nakrem, Hans Arne
text
Zootaxa
2017
2017-10-06
4329
4
351
374
journal article
31875
10.11646/zootaxa.4329.4.3
54677545-2000-47a2-92ce-a03d614140d1
1175-5326
1003014
A0552Ffb-Fe2B-4Fad-809A-A1274Ac86Bcc
Hudlestoniella hammeri
sp. nov.
(
Fig. 5A–G
)
2015
Hudlestoniella
sp.;
Hryniewicz
et al.
2015a
, table 1.
Diagnosis.
Teleoconch high spired. Three earliest teleoconch whorl ornamented with strong opisthocline axial ribs and fine spiral lirae. Ornamentation fading away later in ontogeny.
Holotype:
PMO 224.754, H =
3.6 mm
.
Type
locality and age:
Seep
#
9 in
Sassenfjorden area
,
Svalbard
; late
Berriasian
, Early Cretaceous.
Paratype:
PMO 224.755, H =
8.8 mm
, W = 7.0 mm.
Additional material:
Seventeen specimens; one from seep #5 (late Berriasian), five specimens from seep #8 (late Tithonian), four specimens (two illustrated PMO 224.756 and PMO 224.757) from seep #9 (late Berriasian), and seven specimens from seep #12 (late Berriasian), Sassenfjorden,
Svalbard
.
Description.
Protoconch low spired, seemingly smooth. Demarcation between protoconch and teleoconch not observed. Early teleoconch ornamented with strong, strongly opisthocyrt axial ribs and fine spiral lirae. After the third teleoconch whorl axial ribs absent and spiral lirae are only weakly expressed in the adapical and abapical portion of the shell. Growth lines opisthocyrt throughout ontogeny. Aperture not preserved.
Remarks.
Hudlestoniella hammeri
is most similar to
H. undulata
(
Tullberg, 1881
)
(see also Kaim
et al.
2004) in having strong opisthocyrt axial ribs, but
H. undulata
has slightly broader shells and differs in having spiral striae instead of lirae, and its axial ribs persist longer during ontogeny.
Hudlestoniella pusilla
(
Tullberg, 1881
)
(see also Kaim
et al.
2004) is similar in being ornamented by spiral lirae and smooth ontogenetically late whorls, but differs from
H. hammeri
in being less elongated and in having weaker and only weakly opisthocyrt axial ribs.
Distribution.
Late Tithonian–late Berriasian of Sassenfjorden,
Svalbard
.
Etymology.
After Øyvind Hammer, palaeontologist and member of the team that collected the fossils described here.