120 GENESIS OF THE ARIETIDA. 
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i 
V. | 
DESCRIPTIONS OF GENERA AND SPECIES OF ARIETIDZ} 
RADICAL STOCK. 
FIRST, OR PSILOCERAN BRANCH. 
PSILOCERAS. 
HELL smooth, plicated or with fold-like pile in some subseries. The abdo- 
men is rounded, or with smooth median zone, never channelled or keeled. 
Whorl in section is compressed, helmet-shaped. The sutures are similar in pro- 
portions and outlines to those of Caloceras. This is shown in the broad abdomi- 
i nal lobe and large siphonal saddle, the equality in length and size of the abdomi- if 
nal and lateral lobes and saddles, their leaf-shaped marginal digitations, and the 
number and inclination posteriorly of the auxiliary lobes and saddles. 
i The living chamber is one, or more than one, volution in length, and is shorter 
i in the young than in the adult stages.” Senility is indicated by increasing con- 
vergence of the sides, and the loss of plications,® but a subacute abdomen, such as 
appears in the old whorl of Wehneroceras, is never present. The completeness | 
and accuracy of Wihner’s illustrations and descriptions, which enable one to study 4 
all the stages of growth in some species, has tempted us to suggest the existence 
of three subseries in this genus. (1.) The first contains smooth shells, typical 
helmet-shaped whorl, and an old age in which a subacute whorl is not yet re- 
corded in any species. (2.) The second contains plicated shells exactly similar 
in form, but the folds numerous and regular, and in some species figured by 
Wihner these cross the abdomen with a forward bend. They are, however, not 
true pile, and, so far as we know, they do not become depressed along the median 
zone as in Weehneroceras. (3.) The third contains shells having psiloceran forms 
but flattened sides, and often plicated as in the second subseries, though the 
Psil. Hagenowii is smooth. We regard this subseries as of doubtful utility, but do 
not know how to dispose at present of the forms it contains. 
1 Throughout this chapter there is no attempt to give a complete synonymy of any one species. 
The references given under each name are only those which were considered essential to settle the applica- 
tion of the specific name and the range of the forms to which it was applied in this memoir. The localities 
given are those of specimens in the collections of the Museum of Comparative Zodlogy. 
2 Quenstedt, Amm. Schwab. Jura, pl. i. fig. 6, shows a nealogic stage in which this chamber is not quite r 
half a volution in length. Wiihner takes note of this, (Unter. Lias d. nordést. Alpen, Mojsis. et Neum., 
Beitr., 1V., 1886, p. 135,) and states that in one example of Psil. planorbe from Wiirtemburg observed by him 
the living chamber was only two thirds of a volution in length, and suggests the same opinion with regard 
to the shorter living chambers of the young. 
5 Quenstedt figures what may be a fragment of an old specimen of Psil. planorbe, Amm. Schwab. Jura, 
pl. iii. fig. 1, and Wiahner has figured several old specimens in Unter. Lias, Mojsis. et Neum., Beitr. 
Ata etm 
