Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-t5tsf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-14T05:10:06.009Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

By-the-wind-sailors from a Late Devonian foreshore environment in western Montana

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 May 2016

Raymond C. Gutschick
Affiliation:
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana 46556-1020
Joaquin Rodriguez
Affiliation:
Department of Geology and Geography, Hunter College of the City University of New York, New York, New York 10021

Abstract

Three remarkable fossil medusoid hydrozoans (Plectodiscus latinautilus n. sp.) with disc, topsail, and pendant tentacular appendages were recovered from the latest Late Devonian beds of the Sappington Member of the Three Forks Formation in the Gallatin Range, southwest Montana. This is the first velellid reported from a Paleozoic beach paleoenvironment. Top and underside patterns of these chondrophorine velellids display well-preserved casts and mold imprints in fine siltstone. Outlines of the circular disc and the profile of the wide sail and tentacular structures embedded in soft tissue can be recognized.

These floating colonial animals were moved along the southeast shores of the Sappington Basin during a time of eustatic sea level lowering and regression in a tropical setting. Colonies were washed up on the upper beach where they were stranded in the bubbling swash left behind by the surf. The foreshore was constructed of tabular, planar cross-bedded, seaward-dipping, foreset accretionary beds which contain parallel laminations and lime-coated grains. Bedding is inclined 17° to 24° seaward.

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

Brandt, J. F. 1835. Prodromus descriptionis animalium ab H. Mertensio in orbis terrarum circumnavigatione observatorum. St. Petersburg, 76 p.Google Scholar
Caster, K. E. 1942. Two new siphonores from the Paleozoic. Palaeontographica Americana, 3:5690.Google Scholar
Chamberlain, C. K. 1971. A by-the-wind-sailor (Velellidae) from the Pennsylvanian flysch of Oklahoma. Journal of Paleontology, 45:724728.Google Scholar
Chamisso, A. de, and Eysenhart, C. G. 1821. De animalibus quibusdam e classe Vermium etc., fascicle 2. Academy Caesare Leopold, Nova Acta, 10:343374.Google Scholar
Fisher, D. W. 1957. Lithology, paleoecology, and paleontology of the Vernon Shale (Late Silurian) in the type area. New York State Museum Science Service Bulletin, 364, 31 p.Google Scholar
Gutschick, R. C., and Lamborn, R. 1975. Bifungites, trace fossils from Devonian-Mississippian rocks of Pennsylvania and Montana, U.S.A. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 18:193212.Google Scholar
Gutschick, R. C., McLane, M. J., and Rodriguez, J. 1976. Summary of Late Devonian-Early Mississippian biostratigraphic framework in western Montana. Tobacco Root Geological Society Guidebook, 1976 Field Conference, Montana Bureau of Mines and Geology, Special Publication 73:91124.Google Scholar
Gutschick, R. C., and Rodriguez, J. 1979. Biostratigraphy of the Pilot Shale (Devonian-Mississippian) and contemporaneous strata in Utah, Nevada, and Montana. Brigham Young University Geology Studies, 26(1):3763.Google Scholar
Gutschick, R. C., Suttner, L. J., and Switek, M. J. 1962. Biostratigraphy of transitional Devonian-Mississippian Sappington Formation of southwest Montana. Billings Geological Society Guidebook, 13th Annual Field Conference, p. 7989.Google Scholar
Heckel, P. H., and Witzke, B. J. 1979. Devonian world paleogeography determined from distribution of carbonates and related lithic paleoclimatic indicators. The Devonian System, Special Papers in Palaeontology 23, Palaeontological Association, London, p. 99123.Google Scholar
Hogler, J. A., and Hanger, R. A. 1989. A new chondrophorine (Hydrozoa, Velellidae) from the Upper Triassic of Nevada. Journal of Paleontology, 63:249250.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huckriede, R. 1967. Archaeonectris benderi n. gen., n. sp., (Hydrozoa), eine Chondrophore von der Wende Orovicium/Silurium aaus Jordanien. Geologica et Paleontologica, 1:101109.Google Scholar
Hyman, L. H. 1940. The Invertebrates: Protozoa through Ctenophora. McGraw-Hill Book Co., New York and London, 726 p.Google Scholar
Inden, R. F., and Moore, C. H. 1983. Carbonate depositional environments, 5. Beach environment. American Association of Petroleum Geologists, Memoir 33:211265.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. G., Klapper, G., and Sandberg, C. A. 1985. Devonian eustatic fluctuations in Euramerica. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 96:567587.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. G., Klapper, G., and Sandberg, C. A. 1989. Devonian eustatic events in the western United States and their biostratigraphic responses, p. 171178. In McMillan, N. J., Embry, A. F., and Glass, D. J. (eds.), Devonian of the World. Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists, Memoir 14(3).Google Scholar
McMannis, W. J., and Chadwick, R. A. 1964. Geology of the Garnet Mountain quadrangle, Gallatin County, Montana. Montana Bureau of Mines and Geology Bulletin 43, 47 p., map.Google Scholar
Miller, J. D., and Kent, D. V. 1988. Paleomagnetism of the Silurian-Devonian Andreas redbeds: evidence for an Early Devonian supercontinent? Geology, 16:195198.Google Scholar
Rauff, H. 1939. Palaeonectris discoidea Rauff, eine Siphonophoride Meduse aus dem rheinischen Unterdevon nebst bemerkungen zur umstritten Brooksella rhenana Kirkelin. Palaontologische Zeitschrift, 21:194213.Google Scholar
Rodriguez, J., and Gutschick, R. C. 1967. Brachiopods from the Sappington Formation (Devonian-Mississippian) of western Montana. Journal of Paleontology, 41:364384.Google Scholar
Rodriguez, J., and Gutschick, R. C. 1970. Late Devonian-Early Mississippian ichnofossils from western Montana and northern Utah, p. 407438. In Crimes, T. P. and Harper, J. C. (eds.), Trace Fossils 1. Geological Journal Special Issue 3.Google Scholar
Rodriguez, J., and Gutschick, R. C. 1975. Epibiontic relationships on a Late Devonian algal bank. Journal of Paleontology, 52:13461355.Google Scholar
Ruedemann, R. 1916. Note on Paropsonema cryptophyta Clarke and Discophyllum Hall . New York State Museum Bulletin 189:2227.Google Scholar
Ruedemann, R. 1934. Paleozoic plankton of North America. Geological Society of America Memoir 2, 141 p.Google Scholar
Sandberg, C. A., Gutschick, R. C., Johnson, J. G., Poole, F. G., and Sando, W. J. 1983. Middle Devonian to Late Mississippian geologic history of the Overthrust Belt region, western United States. Rocky Mountain Association of Geologists, Geological Studies of the Cordilleran Thrust Belt, 2:691719.Google Scholar
Sandberg, C. A., Gutschick, R. C., Johnson, J. G., Poole, F. G., and Sando, W. J. 1986. Middle Devonian to Late Mississippian event stratigraphy of the Overthrust Belt region, western United States, p. 205207. In Bless, M. J. M. and Streel, M. (eds.), Late Devonian Events Around the Old Red Continent. Societe Geologique de Belgique Annales, 109(1), Special Volume “Aachen 1986,” Liege.Google Scholar
Sandberg, C. A., and Klapper, G. 1967. Stratigraphy, age, and paleotectonic significance of the Cottonwood Canyon Member of the Madison Limestone in Wyoming and Montana. U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1251-B:1-70.Google Scholar
Sandberg, C. A., Poole, F. G., and Johnson, J. G. 1989. Upper Devonian of western United States, p. 183200. In McMillan, N. J., Embry, A. F., and Glass, D. J. (eds.), Devonian of the world. Canadian Society of Petroleum Geologists, Memoir 14(1).Google Scholar
Sandberg, C. A., Streel, M., and Scott, R. A. 1972. Comparison between conodont zonation and spore assemblages at the Devonian-Carboniferous boundary in the western and central United States and in Europe. 7th International Carboniferous Congress of Stratigraphy and Geology, Krefeld, Germany, Comptes Rendu 1:179203.Google Scholar
Sandberg, C. A., Ziegler, W., Dreesen, R., and Butler, J. L. 1988. Part 3: Late Frasnian mass extinction: conodont event stratigraphy, global changes, and possible causes. Courier Forschungs-Institut Senckenberg, 102:263307.Google Scholar
Scotese, C. R. 1986. Early Famennian (367) equatorial world view, Pl. 12. In Roy, S. (ed.), The Devonian; A Portfolio of Maps 1978-1986. Alaska Pacific University, The Devonian Institute, Anchorage.Google Scholar
Scotese, C. R., Van der Voo, R., and Barrett, S. F. 1985. Silurian and Devonian base map. Royal Society of London Philosophical Transactions, B309:5777.Google Scholar
Seilacher, A., and Hemleben, C. 1966. Beitrage zur sedimentation und fossilfuhrung des Hunsruckschiefers, 14. Spurenfauna und bildungstiefe der Hunsruckschiefer (Unterdevon). Notizblatt hessisches Lamdesamt Bodenforschung, 94:4053.Google Scholar
Stanley, G. D. 1986. Chondrophorine hydrozoans as problematic fossils, p. 6886. In Hoffman, A. and Nitecki, M. H. (eds.), Problematic Fossil Taxa. Oxford University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Stanley, G. D., and Yancey, T. E. 1986. A new late Paleozoic chondrophorine (Hydrozoa, Velellidae) by-the-wind-sailor from Malaysia. Journal of Paleontology, 60:7683.Google Scholar
Streel, M. 1986. Miospores contribution to the Upper Famennian-Strunian event stratigraphy, p. 7592. In Late Devonian Events Around the Old Red Continent. Societe Geologique de Belgique Annales, 109.Google Scholar
Van der Voo, R. 1988. Paleozoic paleogeography of North America Gondwana, and intervening displaced terranes; comparison of paleomagnetism with paleoclimatology and biogeographical patterns. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 98:475487.Google Scholar
Yochelson, E. L., Stürmer, W., and Stanley, G. D. Jr. 1983. Plectodiscus discoideus (Rauff): a redescription of a chondrophorine from the Early Devonian Hunsrück Slate, West Germany. Palaontologische Zeitschrift, 37:3968.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ziegler, W., and Sandberg, C. A. 1984. Palmatolepis-based revision of upper part of standard Late Devonian conodont zonation. Geological Society of America, Special Paper 196:179194.Google Scholar