Rare Middle Triassic coleoids from the Alpine-Carpathian system: new records from Slovakia and their significance
Author
Košťák, Martin
Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Faculty of Science, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic
Author
Schlögl, Ján
Department of Geology and Palaeontology, Faculty of Natural Sciences, Comenius University in Bratislava, Bratislava, Slovakia
Author
Fuchs, Dirk
SNSB-Bayerische Staatssammlung fÜr Paläontologie und Geologie, Munich, Germany
Author
Havrila, Milan
Geological Institute of Dionýz Štúr, Bratislava, Slovakia
Author
Kolar-Jurkovšek, Tea
Geological Survey of Slovenia, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Author
Vörös, Attila
Hungarian Natural History Museum, Budapest, Hungary
Author
Havelcová, Martina
Department of Geochemistry, Institute of Rock Structure and Mechanics of the CAS, Prague, Czech Republic
Author
Šurka, Juraj
Earth Science Institute, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava, Slovakia
Author
Havrila, Jakub
Bratislava, Slovakia
Author
Holcová, Katarína
Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Faculty of Science, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic
text
Swiss Journal of Palaeontology
2024
19
2024-05-08
143
1
1
19
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13358-024-00316-7
journal article
10.1186/s13358-024-00316-7
1664-2384
12006101
Genus
Mojsisovicsteuthis
Jeletzky, 1966
Type
species:
Orthoceras convergens
von Hauer, 1847
; p. 259, Tab. 7, figs. 1–2.
Diagnosis
: Phragmocone longi- to orthoconic, medium-sized (up to
40 cm
), laterally compressed, apical angle 10–20°, chamber length-to-diameter ratio 0.16–0.30, final chamber tubular (= proostracum absent), its relative length uncertain; sutures simple or with lateral lobes, septal necks short, prochoanitic?, connecting rings swollen; siphuncle at the ventral narrow side; sheath investment-like, smooth, rostrum solidum apparently absent.
Fig. 4
Associated conodont fauna recorded at the locality Podhradie. All specimens come from the Bed 3.
A
Paragondolella trammeri
(
Kozur, 1972
)
.
B
Paragondolella
cf.
alpina
(
Kozur & Mostler,1982
)
.
C
Paragondolella slugovensis
(
Ramovš, 1996
)
.
D
Paragondolella
ex gr.
praeszaboi
(
Kovács et al., 1996
)
.
E
,
F
Neogondolella constricta
(
Mosher & Clark, 1965
)
.
G
Paragondolella praeszaboi
(Kovácset al., 1996).
H
Paragondolella
cf.
praeszaboi
(
Kovács et al., 1996
)
.
I–K
Paragondolella bifurcata
Budurov & Stefanov, 1972
. Scale bar 200 μm (
A
) and 200 μm (
B–K
)
Remarks
: Despite an unusual set of characters,
Jeletzky (1966)
originally (and later authors such as
Rieber, 1973
as well) placed the genus
Mojsisovicsteuthis
along with aulacoceratid belemnoids (see also
Rieber, 1973
). Prochoanitic septal neck as well as “conothecal growth lines” led them to this conclusion.
Doyle (1990)
placed
Mojsisovicsteuthis
to the family
Xiphoteuthididae (
Naef, 1922
)
within
Aulacoceratida
Stolley, 1919
. By contrast,
Mariotti and Pignatti (1992)
and
Mariotti et al. (2021)
excluded
Mojsisovicsteuthis
from the
Aulacoceratida
mainly owing to the absence of a rostrum proper and untypically dense (short) chambers.
Pohle & Klug (2024)
recently revisited the affinities of
Mojsisovicsteuthis
and concluded that the systematic affiliation are still puzzling. We follow this open nomenclature, because a tubular (ventrally closed) final chamber excludes this taxon from the
Phragmoteuthida
, whose members are typified by a ventrally opened final chamber. The overall mantle length in aulacoceratids and
Mojsisovicsteuthis
is difficult to estimate for the following reasons: (1) we do not know the proostracum in both taxa (if it was originally present) or its length. (2) large aulacoceratids
s
.
l
. are more than
50 cm
long (
Mariotti & Pignatti, 1992
)—but this length represents mainly the phragmocone. The largest size of the phragmocone within
Mojsisovicsteuthis
is estimated to be about
35 cm
(see below).
Other species previously assumed to be close to
Mojsisovicsteuthis convergens
(
von Hauer, 1847
)
are
M
.
elliptica
(
Mojsisovics, 1871
)
,
M
.
meneghinii
(
Salomon, 1895
)
,
M
.
subrotundus
(
Salomon, 1895
)
,
M
.
boeckhi
(
Stürzenbaum, 1875
)
and
Mojsisovicsteuthis
?
n. sp. (
Jeletzky, 1966
, Pl. 5,
Fig. 1
).
Stratigraphic and geographic occurrences
: So far known from the Anisian (Middle Triassic) through the Hettangian (Lower Jurassic).
According to previous workers and their ambiguous samples, representatives of this rare genus are known from the Middle Triassic (Anisian to Ladinian) through the Lower Jurassic (Hettangian) of the Alpine region,
Hungary
, Indo-Pacific Region (Timor), with question mark also from British Columbia (
Jeletzky, 1966
) and also other regions (see below—
M
.
boeckhi
). In
Slovakia
(this report), it comes from dark-grey to black biodetritic limestones of the Ráztoka Limestone Member of Zámostie Limestone Formation, dated to lower Illyrian (upper Anisian), uppermost part of the
Trinodosus Zone (Pseudohungaricum Subzone)
—probably lowermost part of the Reitzi Zone (Felsoeoersensis Subzone?).