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
Pseudotoma danica
n. sp.
Figs 32
O–S
Diagnosis.
Protoconch obtusely conical with slightly less than three smooth whorls. Teleoconch with subsutural spiral cord and constriction and in general around 15 to 18 short and sharp transverse ribs per whorl.
Derivation of name.
Name refers to
Denmark
from where it is known.
Type material.
The
holotype
,
MGUH 33283
, is a nearly complete external mould collected by
A. Rosenkrantz
on
18 July 1940
.
Paratype
MGUH 33284
was collected from the
Cerithium Limestone Member
between Knøsen and Harvig
,
while
paratype
MGUH 33285
was found in the same bed at
Skeldervig
.
Additional material.
15 moulds with informal sample numbers SH.184.A, SH.192.A, SH.194.A–B, SH.293. A, SH.452, SR.310.A–B (
2 specimens
), SR.365.A–B, SR.274, SR.403.A–B, SR.513, SR.515, SR.625, SR.689. A–B, DN.2, and 21 more or less fragmentary moulds from the uncatalogued old collections of the Natural History Museum of
Denmark
have been examined from the
Cerithium Limestone Member
at Stevns Klint.A single external fragmentary mould,
ØSM
.10042-272-b, is known from the Maastrichtian Højerup Member at Stevns Klint
.
Type
stratum and
type
locality.
Cerithium Limestone Member
from the fourth
Cerithium Limestone
trough south of the old church at Højerup, Stevns Klint.
Occurrence.
Moderately common in the
Cerithium Limestone Member
at Stevns Klint. This species is also present in the contemporaneous ‘dead layer’ in Dania Quarry, Northern Jutland, as evidenced by material collected by K.I. Schnetler. Furthermore it seems to range down into the Maastrichtian Højerup Member, though better material may show this to represent a separate species.
Description.
Protoconch obtusely conical, consisting of 2 ¾ smooth and convex whorls meeting at a marked angle. Transition to teleoconch sharp, marked by the appearance of sharp transverse ribs and finer spiral cords or threads, and by a change in spire angle.
Teleoconch rather compact biconic fusiform with distinct stepped outline and short canal. Whorls moderately low, twice as wide as high, with strongly developed shoulder and distinct subsutural spiral swelling and constriction at adapical suture. Shoulder ramp concave. Aperture subtriangular with distinct adapical channel and rather gradual transition to wide and short siphonal canal; siphonal canal with rounded distal termination. Callus rather narrow, on parietal region additionally very thin, allowing the underlying spiral ribs to appear as weak folds. Apertural lips and columella otherwise smooth.
Teleoconch sculpture dominated by around 15 to 18 short and sharp, opisthocline and slightly opisthocyrt transverse ribs; ribs highest at shoulder, tapering out towards sutures. Transverse ribs partly effaced at adapical whorl constriction, becoming stronger again on subsutural swelling. Spiral cords fine and close together, increasing in number with whorl size. Growth lines sigmoid, describing wide U-shaped sinus on abapical part of shoulder ramp.
Measurements.
Largest complete specimen,
MGUH
33283,
14.9 mm
high and
6.2 mm
wide, consisting of protoconch and four teleoconch whorls.
Remarks.
Pseudotoma danica
n. sp.
differs from the contemporaneous
Pseudotoma
sp. figured by
Kollmann & Peel (1983)
from
Greenland
by a slightly more compact shell with a weaker shoulder and a more rounded distal termination of the siphonal canal. It is distinguished from the Danish Selandian
P. steenstrupi
(
von Koenen, 1885
)
by typically sharper and more numerous transverse ribs and a more gradual transition to the siphonal canal.