Early Coal Swamp Vegetation From The Serpukhovian Lower Clackmannan Group Of Scotland
Author
Cleal, Christopher J.
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, BS 8 1 TQ, United Kingdom; email: christopher. cleal @ bristol. ac. uk.
Author
Strullu-Derrien, Christine
Institut de Systématique, Évolution, Biodiversité (UMR 7205), Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France. & Science Group, The Natural History Museum, London, United Kingdom.
Author
Spencer, Alan R. T.
Department of Earth Sciences, The Natural History Museum, London, United Kingdom. & Department of Earth Science and Engineering, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
text
Fossil Imprint
2024
2024-11-18
80
1
35
67
journal article
10.37520/fi.2024.006
2533-4069
14722393
Calymmotheca divaricata
(
GÖPP
.)
STUR
, 1877
Text-fig. 9
1836
Cheilanthites divaricatus
GÖPP
.
, p. 238, pl. 12, figs 1, 2.
1836
Gleichenites linkii
GÖPP
.
, p. 182, pl. 2, fig. 1.
1875
Sphenopteris falkenhainii
STUR
, p. 26, pl. 6, fig. 1.
1877
Calymmotheca divaricata
(
GÖPP
.)
STUR
, p. 165, pl. 13, figs 1–3.
1923
Sphenopteris falkenhainii
STUR
; Kidston, p. 79, pl. 19, fig. 1.
1923
Sphenopteris fragilis
KIDST
.
(non Schlotheim), p. 86, pl. 17, figs 1–5.
1923
Schuetzia bennieana
KIDST
.
; Kidston, pl. 107, fig. 8.
1924
Schuetzia
cf.
bennieana
KIDST
.
; Kidston, pl. 107, figs 9–13.
Text-fig. 9.
Calymmotheca divaricata
(
GÖPP
.)
STUR
.
a: Wimbledon Pit, Machrihanish, Campbeltown, Mull of Kintyre; shale above Main Coal, Limestone Coal Formation; BGS Kidst.3202. b, c: Machrihanish Water, 290 m west of Wimbledon Pit, Campbeltown, Mull of Kintyre; Limestone Coal Formation; BGS Kidst.3210 (b), BGS Kidst.4488 (c). Scale bars = 10 mm.
D e s c r i p t i o n. Bifurcate fronds attached to stems up to
15 mm
wide with elongate-anastomosed surface markings. Primary rachis ca.
3 mm
wide, bifurcating at 35° about
40 mm
away from the attachment to the stem to
form bipinnate
to tripinnate primary rachis branches. Gentlytapered ultimate pinnae attached at 70‒90°, oppositely or suboppositely arranged, spaced up to
15 mm
apart. Pinnules up to
5 mm
long and
3 mm
wide, alternately to suboppositely arranged, and somewhat obliquely (70‒80°) attached to rachis by a broad but short petiole; pinnule shape deltoid to subrhomboidal. The most proximal pinnules are deeply incised with five to seven cuneate lobes, with each lobe sometimes being further shallowly divided; more distal pinnules are less divided and at the ends of the ultimate pinnae they become simple or bifid.
R e m a r k s. This fossil-species is widespread in the upper Visean and Serpukhovian of Europe (
Mosseichik 2010
). Historically it has often been referred to as “
Sphenopteris fragilis
SCHLOTH
.
”. That name was not validly published as
Schlotheim’s (1820)
work pre-dated the starting point for palaeobotanical nomenclature but was subsequently validated by
Brongniart (1828)
. As pointed out by
Strullu-Derrien et al. (2021)
, however, the
type
of that name (
Schlotheim 1804
: pl. 10, fig. 17) is difficult to interpret and the earliest legitimate name with a
type
that can definitely be assigned to this species is
Cheilanthites divaricatus
the basionym of
Calymmotheca divaricata
.
Kidston (1923
: pl. 17, figs 1–5) figured specimens of this species from the Upper Limestone Formation as
S. fragilis
BRONGN
. He
also (
Kidston 1923
: pl. 19, fig. 1) figured a specimen with somewhat less divided pinnules as
Sphenopteris falkenhainii
STUR
(
Stur 1875
)
but
Patteisky (1957)
regarded this species as being merely a variety of
C. divaricata
and the distinction is not recognised here.
Clusters of sporangia associated with
C. divaricata
fronds were described by
Kidston (1924)
as
Schuetzia
cf.
bennieana
but
Walton (1931)
showed this generic attribution to be incorrect; they are almost certainly the pollen organs of
C. divaricata
.
O c c u r r e n c e s. Widespread through the Limestone Coal Formation from the coal-bearing interval above the Black Metals Band, and through the Upper Limestone Formation to just below the Castlecary Limestone.