Dudleyaspis
Dudleyaspis is an extinct genus of Lower to Middle Devonian odontopleurid trilobites that lived in a shallow sea that lay between Euramerica and Gondwana.[1] It was named in 1949 by Prantl & Pribyl.[2]
Dudleyaspis Temporal range: Middle Silurian-Late Devonian, | |
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Genus: | †Dudleyaspis Prantl & Pribyl, 1949 |
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Fossils of Dudleyaspis have been found in the following locations:
- Australia: Bathurst (Jesse Limestone[3]), Mudgee (Flirtation Hill[4]) and Murrumbateman (Black Bog Formation – Yarwood Siltstone Member[5])
- Canada: Northwest Territories (Mackenzie Mountains – Delorme and Whittaker Formations[6][7]) and Nunavut (Bailie-Hamilton and Cornwallis Islands – Cape Phillips Formation[8])
- Czech Republic: Prague (Loc. 5.2 – C. colonus Zone[9])
- England: Cannock (Shelve District[10]) and Dudley (Wren's Nest – Much Wenlock Limestone Formation[11])
- France: Coumiac (Coumiac quarry – Coumiac Formation[12][13])
- Sweden: western Gotland (Visby – Rönnklint sea cliff and Kättelviken[1])
- United States: Illinois (Chicago – Racine Dolomite[14] and Kankakee – Racine Dolomite[14]), Iowa (Hopkinton Dolomite[15]), Oklahoma (Anadarko – Henryhouse Formation[16]) and Wisconsin (Milwaukee – Racine Dolomite[14])
References
- Ramsköld, L. (1984). Silurian Odontopleurid trilobites from Gotland. Palaeontology 27, 2, 239–264.
- F. Prantl and A. Pribyl. (1949). On the genus Symphysurus Goldfuss and allied forms from the Ordovician of Bohemia (Trilobitae). Véstník Královské Ceské Spole ností Nauk Trída mat.-pfír 12:1–16
- Wright A. J., Chatterton B. D. E. (1988) Early Devonian trilobites from the Jesse Limestone, New South Wales, Australia, Journal of Paleontology 62 1, 93–103
- Chatterton B. D. E., Wright A. J. (1986) Silicified Early Devonian trilobites from Mudgee, New South Wales, Alcheringa 10 3, 279–296
- Strusz D. L., Garratt M. J. (1999) Australian communities, Paleocommunities – a case study from the Silurian and Lower Devonian, 177–199
- Edgecombe G. D. (1994) New Lower Silurian (Llandovery) encrinurine trilobites from the Mackenzie Mountains, Canada, Journal of Paleontology 68 4, 824–837
- Ludvigsen R. (1975) Ordovician formations and faunas, southern Mackenzie Mountains, Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 12, 663–697
- Adrain J. M., Edgecombe G. D. (1997) Silurian encrinurine trilobites from the central Canadian Arctic, Palaeontographica Canadiana 14, 1–38
- Kíž J. (1992) Silurian field excursions: Prague Basin (Barrandian), Bohemia, National Museum of Wales, Geological Series 13, 1–111
- Williams, A. (1974.) Ordovician Brachiopoda from the Shelve District, Shropshire, ..Bulletin of the British Museum of Natural History (Geology).., Supplement 11, 1–158
- Curtis N.J., Lane P.D. (1997) The Llandovery trilobites of England and Wales. Part 1, Monograph of the Palaeontographical Society 151, 1–50
- Klapper G., Feist R., et al (1993) Definition of the Frasnian/Famennian Stage boundary, Episodes 16 4, 433–441
- House M. R., Becker R. T., et al (2000) The Frasnian/Famennian boundary GSSP at Coumiac, southern France, Courier Forschungs-Institut Senckenberg 225, 59–75
- Mikulic D. G. (1999) Silurian trilobite associations in North America, Paleocommunities—a case study from the Silurian and Lower Devonian, 793–798
- Mikulic D. G. (1981) Trilobites in Paleozoic carbonate buildups, Lethaia 14 1, 45–56
- Amsden T. W. (1975) Hunton Group of the Anadarko Basin of Oklahoma:, Oklahoma Geological Survey Bulletin 121, 1–301
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