Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-m8qmq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T03:06:06.023Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A revision of Novacystis hawkesi Paul and Bolton 1991 (Middle Silurian: Glyptocystitida, Echinodermata) and the phylogeny of early callocystitids

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2015

Colin D. Sumrall
Affiliation:
Department of Geoscience, University of Iowa, Iowa City 52242, and Department of Geology, University of Cincinnati, Ohio 45221-0013,
Carlton E. Brett
Affiliation:
Department of Geoscience, University of Iowa, Iowa City 52242, and Department of Geology, University of Cincinnati, Ohio 45221-0013,

Abstract

A relatively large new specimen of the callocystitid rhombiferan Novacystis hawkesi Paul and Bolton, 1991, is described from the Wenlock (Middle Silurian) Thornloe Formation of east-central Ontario. This new specimen adds to the known morphology of Novacystis hawkesi, including the plating of the thecal side opposite the periproct, the presence of four pectinirhombs in standard callocystitid placements, and brachiole morphology. It also confirms the unusual placement of the periproct previously described for this species. A phylogenetic analysis of Callocystitidae indicates that, as presently defined, Callocystitinae sensu Paul and Bolton is polyphyletic and Apiocystitinae is paraphyletic. Novacystis forms part of a small, relatively primitive echinoderm fauna, probably of middle Wenlock age from the Timiskaming area, suggesting that shallow cratonic areas of the Canadian shield area may have served as refugium for archaic echinoderm taxa.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

1

Present Address: Department of Geological Sciences, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996

References

Ausich, W. I., and Schumacher, G. A. 1984. New Lower Silurian rhombiferan cystoid (Echinodermata, Callocystitidae) from southwestern Ohio. Journal of Paleontology, 58:915.Google Scholar
Bather, F. A. 1899. A phylogenetic classification of the Pelmatozoa. British Association for the Advancement of Science, Report, 68th Meeting section D (Bristol, 1898), 916923.Google Scholar
Bernard, F. 1895. Éléments de Paléontologie. J. B. Baillière and Fils, Paris, 612 p.Google Scholar
Bolton, T. E. 1970. Echinodermata of the Ordovician (Pleurocystites, Cremacrinus) and Silurian (Hemicystites, Protaxocrinus, Mcnamaratylus) of the Lake Timiskaming region, Ontario and Quebec. Geological Survey of Canada Bulletin, 5966.Google Scholar
Bolton, T. E., and Copeland, M. J. 1972. Palaeozoic formations and Silurian biostratigraphy, Lake Timiskaming, Ontario and Quebec. Geological Survey of Canada, Paper 72-15, 149.Google Scholar
Boucot, A. J. 1975. Evolution and extinction rate controls. Elsevier, Amsterdam, 427 p.Google Scholar
Boucot, A. J., and Lawson, J. D. (eds.). 1999. Paleocommunity Analysis: A Silurian-Lower Devonian Example. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 938 p.Google Scholar
Brett, C. E., Goodman, W. M., and LoDuca, S. T. 1990. Sequences, cycles, and basin dynamics in the Silurian of the Appalachian basin. Sedimentary Geology, 69:191244.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brett, C. E., Baarli, B. G., Chowns, T., Cotter, E., Driese, S., Goodman, W., and Johnson, M. E. 1998. Early Silurian condensed intervals, ironstones, and sequence stratigraphy in the Appalachian foreland basin, p. 89144. In Landing, E. and Johnson, M. E. (eds.), Silurian Cycles: Linkages of Dynamic Stratigraphy with Atmospheric, Oceanic, and Tectonic Changes. New York State Museum Bulletin 491.Google Scholar
Broadhead, T. W., and Strimple, H. L. 1978. Systematics and distribution of the Callocystitidae (Echinodermata, Rhombifera). Journal of Paleontology, 52:164177.Google Scholar
Copper, P., and Armstrong, D. K. 1999. Ordovician and Silurian fossils and strata of the Lake Timiskaming outlier. Geological Survey of Canada, Mineralogical Association of Canada, Joint Annual Meeting, Field Trip B2 Guidebook, Sudbury, Ontario, 31 p.Google Scholar
Eckert, J. D. 1988. Systematics, evolution and biogeography of Late Ordovician and Early Silurian Crinoids. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Rochester, Rochester, 403 p.Google Scholar
Eckert, J. D. 1990. The Early Silurian Myelodactylid crinoid Eomyelodactylus, Foerste. Journal of Paleontology, 64:135143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eckert, J. D., and Brett, C. E. 2001. Early Silurian (Llandovery) crinoids from the Lower Clinton Group, western New York State. Bulletins of American Paleontology, 360:188.Google Scholar
Frest, T. J., Brett, C. E., and Witzke, B. D. 1999. Caradocian-Gedinnian echinoderm associations of the central and eastern North America, Chapter 45, p. 638783. In Boucot, A. J. and Lawson, J. D. (eds.), Paleocommunity Analysis: A Silurian-Lower Devonian Example. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hume, G. S. 1925. The Palaeozoic inlier of Lake Timiskaming, Ontario and Quebec. Geological Survey of Canada, Memoir 145, 1129.Google Scholar
Kesling, R. V. 1968. Cystoids, p. S85S267. In Moore, R. C. (ed.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part U, Echinodermata 1(1). Geological Society of America and University of Kansas, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Paul, C. R. C., and Bolton, T. E. 1991. A new Lower Silurian callocystitid cystoid from the Lake Timiskaming region, northern Ontario. Contributions to Canadian Palaeontology, Geological Survey of Canada Bulletin, 412:3543.Google Scholar
Sanderson, M. J. 1995. Objections to bootstrapping phylogenies: A critique. Systematic Biology, 44:299320.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sumrall, C. D., and Carlson, D. T. 2000. Suture modification by pectinirhomb growth in Lepadocystis decorus, a new species of callocystitid glyptocystitid rhombiferan (Echinodermata) from Illinois. Journal of Paleontology, 74:487491.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sumrall, C. D., and Sprinkle, J. 1995. Plating and pectinirhombs of the Ordovician rhombiferan Plethoschisma . Journal of Paleontology, 69:772778.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sumrall, C. D., Brochu, C. A., and Merck, J. W. Jr. 2001. Global lability, regional resolution and majority rule consensus bias. Paleobiology, 27:254261.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swofford, D. L. 1998. PAUP*: Phylogenetic analysis using parsimony (* and other methods), version 4. Sinauer, Sunderland, Massachusetts.Google Scholar