Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T23:07:01.243Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Upper Permian brachiopods of the superfamily Orthotetoidea from Hydra Island, Greece

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2015

Richard E. Grant*
Affiliation:
National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. 20560

Abstract

Permian Orthotetoidea on Hydra belong to the genera Cyndalia Grant (1993a), Goniarina Cooper and Grant (1969), Derbyia Waagen (1884), Diplanus Stehli (1954), Schuchertella Girty (1904), Sicelia Merla (1934), and Tropidelasma Cooper and Grant (1969). Hydra has the most complete Permian section in the Western Tethys, 500 m thick and ranging in age from Asselian to Dorashamian. These are the youngest silicified Permian brachiopods west of China.

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.)

References

Caneva, G. 1906. Ueber die Bellerophonkalkfauna zur Frage der Perm-Triasgrenzen. Neues Jahrbuch für Mineralogie, Geologie und Paläontologie, B.B., 1:5260.Google Scholar
Chinzei, K. 1982. Morphological and structural adaptation to soft Substrates in the Early Jurassic Monomyarians Lithiotis and Cochlearites . Lethaia, 15:179197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, G. A., and Grant, R. E. 1969. New Permian brachiopods from West Texas. Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology, 1, 20 p.Google Scholar
Cooper, G. A., and Grant, R. E. 1974. Permian Brachiopods of West Texas, II. Smithsonian Contributions to Paleobiology, 15:233793.Google Scholar
Cossmann, M. 1898. Errata et Rectifications. Revue Critique de Paleozoologie, 1898:7677.Google Scholar
Duméril, A. 1806. Zoologie Analytique ou Méthode Naturelle de Classification des Animaux. Allais, Paris, 344 p.Google Scholar
Fantini Sestini, N. 1965. The geology of the Upper Djadjerud and Lar Valleys (North Iran). II. Palaeontology. Bryozoans, brachiopods and molluscs from Ruteh Limestone (Permian). Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia (Milan), 71:13110.Google Scholar
Gemmellaro, G. G. 1886. Monografia sui fossili del Lias Superiore delle Provincie di Palermo e di Messina, esistenti nel Museo di Geologia della R. Universita di Palermo. Giornale di Scienze Naturali ed Economiche di Palermo, 17:188197.Google Scholar
Girty, G. H. 1904. New molluscan genera from the Carboniferous. United States National Museum, Proceedings, 27:721736.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Girty, G. H. 1909. The Guadalupian fauna and new stratigraphic evidence. New York Academy of Sciences, Annals, 19:135147.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gortani, M., and Merla, G. 1934. Fossili del Paleozoico. Spedizione Italiana de Filippi nell'Himalaia (Bologna), Series 2, 5, 323 p.Google Scholar
Grant, R. E. 1970. Brachiopods from Permian–Triassic boundary beds and age of Chhidru Formation, West Pakistan, p. 117151. In Kummel, B. and Teichert, C. (eds.), Stratigraphic Boundary Problems: Permian and Triassic of West Pakistan. University of Kansas, Department of Geology, Special Publication. 4.Google Scholar
Grant, R. E. 1971. Brachiopods in the Permian reef environment of West Texas. First North American Paleontological Convention, Proceedings (1969), Part J:14441481.Google Scholar
Grant, R. E. 1972. The lophophore and feeding mechanism of the Productidina (Brachiopoda). Journal of Paleontology, 46:213248.Google Scholar
Grant, R. E. 1975. Methods and conclusions in functional analysis: a reply. Lethaia, 8:3133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grant, R. E. 1976. Permian brachiopods from southern Thailand. Journal of Paleontology (Paleontological Society Memoir 9), 50, 269 p.Google Scholar
Grant, R. E. 1980. Koskinoid perforations in brachipod shells: function and mode of formation. Lethaia, 13:313319.Google Scholar
Grant, R. E. 1988. The family Cardiarinidae (late Paleozoic rhynchonellid Brachiopoda). Senckenbergiana Lethaea, 69:121135.Google Scholar
Grant, R. E. 1993a. The brachiopod family Gemmellaroiidae. Journal of Paleontology, 67:5360.Google Scholar
Grant, R. E. 1993b. Permian brachiopods from Khios Island, Greece. Journal of Paleontology (Paleontological Society Memoir 33), 67, 21 p.Google Scholar
Grant, R. E., Nestell, M. K., Baud, A., and Jenny, C. 1991. Permian stratigraphy of Hydra Island, Greece. Palaios, 6:479497.Google Scholar
Greco, B. 1938. Revisione degli Strofomenidi Permiani del Sosio Conservati nel Museo di Geologia della R. Universita di Palermo. Giornale di Scienze Naturali ed Economiche di Palermo, 39:146.Google Scholar
Greco, B. 1942. La Fauna Permiana del Sosio Conservata nei Musei di Pisa, di Firenze e di Padova. Part III. Brachiopoda. Palaeontographia Italica, 40:115159.Google Scholar
Hall, J., and Clarke, J. M. 1892. An introduction to the study of the genera of Palaeozoic Brachiopoda. New York Geological Survey, Palaeontology, 8, 367 p.Google Scholar
Hall, J., and Clarke, J. M. 1894. An introduction to the study of the Brachiopoda, intended as a handbook for the use of students, Part II. New York State Geologist, Annual Report for 1893, 13:751943.Google Scholar
Hoover, P. R. 1981. Paleontology, taphonomy and paleoecology of the Palmarito Formation (Permian of Venezuela). Bulletins of American Paleontology, 80:1138.Google Scholar
Huang, T. K. 1933. Late Permian Brachiopoda of southwestern China, Part 2. Palaeontologia Sinica, Series B, 9:1172.Google Scholar
Kauffman, E. G., and Sohl, N. F. 1974. Structure and evolution of Antillean Cretaceous rudist frameworks. Verhandlungen Naturforschende Gesellschaft, 84(1):399467.Google Scholar
King, R. E. 1931. The geology of the Glass Mountains, Texas. Part II: Faunal summary and correlation of the Permian formations with description of Brachiopoda. University of Texas, Bulletin 3042, 245 p.Google Scholar
Kozlowski, R. 1914. Les Brachiopodes du Carbonifère Superieur de Bolivie. Annales de Paléontologie, 9, 100 p.Google Scholar
MacKinnon, D. I. 1977. The formation of muscle scars in articulate brachiopods. Royal Society of London, Philosophical Transactions, Series B, 280:127.Google Scholar
Merla, G. 1928. Contributo alla Conoscenza della Fauna dei Calcari a Schwagerina della Valle del Sosio (Prov. di Palermo). Atti della Società Toscana di Scienze Naturali Residente in Pisa, Memorie (Pisa), Series A, 38:7087.Google Scholar
Merla, G. 1934. Fossili Triasici delle Depsang. Spedizione Italiana de Filippi nell'Himalaia (Bologna), Series 2, 11:49124.Google Scholar
Muir-Wood, H. M., and Williams, A. 1965. Strophomenida, p. 361521. In Moore, R. C. (ed.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Part H, Brachiopoda. Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Munier-Chalmas, E. 1873. Prodrome d'une classification ses rudistes. Journal de Conchyliologie, 21:7175.Google Scholar
Nestell, M. K., and Grant, R. E. 1987. Permian fusuline succession on Hydra, Greece. 11 th International Congress on Carboniferous Stratigraphy and Geology, Beijing, Abstracts with Papers, Symposium and Miscellaneous, 2:471472.Google Scholar
Nestell, M. K., and Wardlaw, B. R. 1987. Upper Permian conodonts from Hydra, Greece. Journal of Paleontology, 61:758772.Google Scholar
Newell, N. D., Rigby, J. K., Fischer, A. G., Whiteman, A. J., Hickox, J. E., and Bradley, J. S. 1953. The Permian Reef Complex of the Guadalupe Mountains Region, Texas and New Mexico. A Study in Paleoecology. W. H. Freeman Co., San Francisco, 236 p.Google Scholar
Öpik, A. 1934. Ueber Klitamboniten. Tartu Universitatis (Dorpatensis), Acta and Commentationes, Series A, 26, 239 p., Publications of the Geological Institution of the University of Tartu.Google Scholar
Renz, C. 1955. Die Vorneogene Stratigraphie der Normal Sedimentaeren Formationen Griechenlands. Institute for Geology and Subsurface Research, Athens, 637 p.Google Scholar
Rudwick, M. J. S., and Cowen, R. 1968. The functional morphology of some aberrant strophomenide brachiopods from the Permian of Sicily. Società Paleontologica Italiana Bollettino, 6:365.Google Scholar
Ruiz, C. 1932. Gli Strofomenidi del Permiano Della Valle del Sosio, p. 722. In Fabiani, R. and Ruiz, C., Sui Giacimenti Permiani del Sosio (Palermo) e sugli Strofomenidi in Essi Trovati. Società Geologica Italiana, Memorie, 1.Google Scholar
Sando, W. J. 1961. Morphology and ontogeny of Ankhelasma, a new Mississippian coral genus. Journal of Paleontology, 35:6581.Google Scholar
Sokolskaya, A. N. 1965. (Brachiopoda: Strophomenida), p. 203209. In Ruzhentsev, V. E. and Sarytcheva, T. G. (eds.), Razvitie i Smena Morskikh Organizmov na Rubezhe Paleozoia i Mezozoia. [The Development and Change of Marine Organisms at the Palaeozoic-Mesozoic Boundary.] Akademiia Nauk SSSR, Paleontologicheskii Institut, Trudy (Moscow), 108.Google Scholar
Stehli, F. G. 1954. Lower Leonardian Brachiopoda of the Sierra Diablo. American Museum of Natural History Bulletin, 105:257358.Google Scholar
Waagen, W. 1884. Salt Range Fossils. I. Productus-Limestone fossils. Geological Survey of India, Memoirs, Palaeontologia Indica, Series 13, 4:547610.Google Scholar
Wang, Y. 1955. New genera of brachiopods. Scientia Sinica, 4:327357.Google Scholar
White, C. A. 1862. Descriptions of new species of fossils from the Devonian and Carboniferous rocks of the Mississippi Valley. Boston Society of Natural History Proceedings, 9:833.Google Scholar
White, C. A., and Whitfield, R. P. 1862. Observations upon the rocks of the Mississippi Valley which have been referred to the Chemung Group of New York, together with descriptions of new species of fossils from the same horizon at Burlington, Iowa. Boston Society of Natural History, Proceedings, 8:289306.Google Scholar
Williams, A. 1953. The classification of the strophomenoid brachiopods. Washington Academy of Sciences Journal, 43:113.Google Scholar