Title
Brachiopoda from the Gulf of Gascogne, France (recent)
Related Titles
Series:
Smithsonian contributions to paleobiology, no. 44
By
Cooper, G. Arthur (Gustav Arthur), 1902-2000
Type
Book
Material
Published material
Publication info
City of Washington, Smithsonian Institute Press, 1981
Notes
Brachiopods collected during the operations of Biogas and Polygas, Gulf of Gascogne Abyssal Survey, and Thalassa, Gulf of Gascogne Bathyal Survey of the Centre Oce´anologique de Bretagne, are recorded and data concerning them noted. Most of the specimens taken in Biogas and Polygas are from depths ranging from 1010 meters to 4459 meters. The specimens taken by Thalassa are mostly from waters less than 1000 meters in depth. Twenty-one species in 14 genera are recognized, six of them, including a new species, hitherto not recorded from the Gulf of Gascogne, are starred: *Pelagodiscus atlanticus (King), Crania anomala (Mu¨ller), C. anomala turbinata (Poli), *Cryptopora gnomon Jeffreys, Hispanirhynchia cornea (Fischer), Eucalathis ergastica Fischer and Oehlert, E. tuberata (Jeffreys), Terebratulina retusa (Linne´), T. retusa emarginata (Risso), Gryphus vitreus (Born), *G.? cooperi d'Hondt, Dallithyris? aff. D.? sphenoidea (Jeffreys), Platidia anomioides (Scacchi and Philippi), Megerlia truncata (Linne´), M. echinata (Fischer and Oehlert), Pantellaria monstruosa (Scacchi), Macandrevia cranium (Mu¨ller), *M. novangliae Dall, *Fallax dalliniformis Atkins, Dallina septigera (Love´n), and *D. parva, new species. Five described species not previously recorded from the Gulf of Gascogne are: Pelagodiscus atlanticus (King), a world-wide abyssal form; Cryptopora gnomon (Jeffreys), widespread in the northern Atlantic; Macandrevia novangliae Dall, hitherto only known from deep water off the coast of New England, United States; Fallax dalliniformis Atkins, newly discovered in the approaches to the English Channel; and Gryphus? cooperi d'Hondt recently described. The first four were taken in deep water in the Biogas operations; the fifth was taken by Thalassa. Specimens taken by Thalassa are mostly small or immature forms that are usually difficult to identify generically. Specimens of the rare genus Eucalathis appeared in several lots taken by Thalassa as well as the new species, Dallina parva. Not included in the above lists is a fossil brachiopod, dredged by Thalassa, that is assigned with a query to the Cretaceous genus Meonia.
Subjects
Biscay, Bay of (France and Spain)
,
Brachiopoda
BHL Collections
Unearthed! Smithsonian Libraries' Paleo Collection
Call Number
QE701 .S56 no. 44
Language
English
Identifiers
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5479/si.00810266.44.1
LCCN:
https://lccn.loc.gov/81607040
OCLC:
7555384
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