Gastropods from the Cretaceous-Palaeogene boundary in Denmark
Author
Hansen, Thomas
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-08-12
4654
1
1
196
journal article
26049
10.11646/zootaxa.4654.1.1
9ce1d103-9234-4fbe-9544-f1c294bb8783
1175-5326
3365803
CFD82CC0-3110-472E-972B-7ADC0C523A04
Cirsocerithium crassilabris
(
von Koenen, 1885
)
Figs 23
P–S
1885
Scalaria crassilabris
Koenen
: 66, pl. 3, fig. 2.
1939
Eucycloscala
?
crassilabris
(v. Koenen)—Ravn: 58, pl. 2, fig. 1a–c.
1971
Scalina crassilabris
(v. Koenen)—Rosenkrantz: 100.
Diagnosis.
Protoconch with only three whorls, the last half whorl carrying spiral ribs. Teleoconch with around 12 transverse ribs on first whorl, increasing rapidly on later whorls. Aperture with very weakly developed siphonal canal.
Type material.
The type material should include more than
30 specimens
out of which one formed the basis of the drawings presented by
von Koenen (1885
: pl. 3: 2a–d) and got a museum number. This specimen,
MGUH
865, is here selected as the
lectotype
.
MGUH
865 is a nearly complete specimen only lacking the first whorl of the protoconch and the aperture (
Fig. 23R
).
Examined material.
A single external and internal mould,
MGUH
33131, from the
Cerithium Limestone Member
at Holtug, Stevns; a specimen
ØSM
.10042-61-a from the Korsnaeb Member at Korsnaeb, Stevns Klint; an informally catalogued mould SH.320 from the basal
Cerithium Limestone
at Højerup Church, Stevns Klint; the
lectotype
MGUH
865 from the Lellinge Greensand at Vestre Gasvaerk, and the complete specimen,
MGUH
3751, figured by
Ravn (1939
: pl. 2: 1a–c) from the Lellinge Greensand at Sundkrogen, Copenhagen.
Type
stratum and
type
locality.
Black
clay unit from the
Lower Selandian Lellinge Greensand
at
Vestre Gasvaerk in Copenhagen
.
Occurrence.
Lower Danian
Cerithium Limestone Member
of the Rødvig Formation and up into the Lower Selandian Lellinge Greensand of eastern
Denmark
.
Description.
Protoconch conical, consisting of three convex whorls, first 2 ½ whorls smooth with keel just above abapical suture. Last quarter whorl with three spiral ribs, one on the keel and two adapically of this. Transition to teleoconch fairly sharp. Teleoconch whorls convex, evenly rounded, weakly bicarinate with nearly continuous transition to base. Aperture subcircular with strong varix at outer lip and well developed callus and straight and sharp columellar fold partly hiding narrow umbilicus. No teeth or columellar folds present. Siphonal canal only weakly developed. Teleoconch sculpture initially consisting of three spiral ribs and approximately 12 coarse, slightly opisthocyrt transverse ribs, increasing in number to around 20 on fourth whorl and about 35 on fifth whorl. Sinus of transverse ribs located between two keels. Number of spiral ribs increasing gradually with ontogenetic growth. Low and coarse tubercles are formed at crossing points between transverse ribs and three to four primary spiral ribs, one or two of them located at adapical suture, while last two are found at keels. Base nearly smooth or covered by weak spiral ribs.
Measurements.
Specimen
MGUH
33131 from the
Cerithium Limestone Member
measures at least
9.7 mm
in height and 5.0 mm in width, consisting of six teleoconch whorls.
Remarks.
The early Danian specimen may differ from the
type
in having slightly less pronounced sculpture, by a higher number of transverse ribs on later whorls and in having a nearly smooth base. This kind of variation is however common in a normal population of living cerithiid gastropods (
Kase 1984
) and the specimen is here regarded as conspecific with the Selandian
Cirsocerithium crassilabris
.
C. crassilabris
resembles somewhat the Early Cretaceous
type
species
C
.
subspinosum
Deshayes
from
France
and the Mid Cretaceous
C. collignoni
Kiel, 2006
from
Madagascar
, but differs by the higher number of transverse ribs, by the weaker siphonal canal, by the lower number of protoconch whorls and by the absence of denticles in the aperture. The aperture and protoconch compares well with that of
C. kulickii
(
Schröder, 1995
)
from the Early Cretaceous of
Poland
(see Kaim 2004: fig. 25c), but the shell is easily distinguished by the protoconch only having three whorls, the last of which carries three and not two spiral ribs.