GUELPH FAUNA IN THE STATE OF NEW YORK 



33 



CXADOFOKA Hall. I852 



Cladopora multipora Hall 



Cladopora multipora Hall, Paleontology of New York. 1852. 2:140^1.39, 



fig. ia-g 

 Favosites? m u It ip o ra Nicholson, Paleontology of Ontario. 1875. p. 53 

 Cladopora multipora Lambe, Contrib. Canadian Paleontology. 1899. v. 4, 



pt 1, p. 29 



This form, with the characters assigned to it by Hall and by Lambe, 

 is quite common in the upper Shelby layer, occurring in casts in the 

 compact dolomite which present only the tube fillings, while in the nodules 

 the cell walls are retained. Hall reports the species from the lower part of 

 the Lockport limestone at Lockport, and Lambe from the Niagaran of 

 Lake Temiscamingue, Quebec ; it has not been cited from the Canadian 

 Guelph. Whitfield lists an undetermined species of Cladopora from the 

 Guelph of Wisconsin. 



The lower Shelby bed frequently contains indistinct masses of a Clado- 

 pora, which may be also referable to this species. 



halysites Fischer. 1813 

 Halysites catenularius Linne (sp.) 

 Tubipora catenularia Linne, Systema Naturae, ed. 12. 1767. p. 1270 

 Catenipora labyrinthica Goldfuss, Petrefacta Germaniae. 1826. 1:75, 



Pi- 2 5. fi g- 5 

 Halysites catenularia Edwards & Haime, British Fossil Corals. 1855. 



p. 270, pi. 64, fig. ia-c 

 Catenipora e s c h a r o i d e s Hall, Paleontology of New York. 1852. 2:127, pi. 35, 



fig. ia-i 

 Halysites c a t e n u 1 a t u s Billings, in Logan's Geology of Canada. 1863. p. 305, 



fig. 3°3 

 Halysites cat enulari a Nicholson, Paleontology Prov. of Ontario. 1875. p. 51, 



fig. 24a, b 

 Halysites catenularia Whiteaves, Paleozoic Fossils. 1895. v. 3, pt 2, p. 47 

 Halysites catenularia Lambe, Contrib. Canadian Paleontology. 1 899. v. 4, 



pt 2, p. 68 



