Neogastropods (Melongenidae, Fasciolariidae, Turridae) from the Cannonball Formation (Paleocene: Thanetian), North Dakota and South Dakota

The Cannonball Formation of Paleocene age is a shallow-marine, clastic sequence exposed primarily in southwest-central North Dakota and northwestern South Dakota. The formation is characterized by alternating, poorly consolidated, relatively thin sandstone and thick mudstone units. The Cannonball ne...

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Main Author: Silfer, Brian E.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: UND Scholarly Commons 1990
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Online Access:https://commons.und.edu/theses/278
https://commons.und.edu/context/theses/article/1277/viewcontent/Silfer__Brian_E.__MS_Thesis_1990.pdf
https://commons.und.edu/context/theses/article/1277/filename/0/type/additional/viewcontent/Silfer_Plates.zip
id ftunivndakota:oai:commons.und.edu:theses-1277
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivndakota:oai:commons.und.edu:theses-1277 2023-06-11T04:12:21+02:00 Neogastropods (Melongenidae, Fasciolariidae, Turridae) from the Cannonball Formation (Paleocene: Thanetian), North Dakota and South Dakota Silfer, Brian E. 1990-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://commons.und.edu/theses/278 https://commons.und.edu/context/theses/article/1277/viewcontent/Silfer__Brian_E.__MS_Thesis_1990.pdf https://commons.und.edu/context/theses/article/1277/filename/0/type/additional/viewcontent/Silfer_Plates.zip unknown UND Scholarly Commons https://commons.und.edu/theses/278 https://commons.und.edu/context/theses/article/1277/viewcontent/Silfer__Brian_E.__MS_Thesis_1990.pdf https://commons.und.edu/context/theses/article/1277/filename/0/type/additional/viewcontent/Silfer_Plates.zip Theses and Dissertations Geology--South Dakota Geology--North Dakota Geology Stratigraphic--Paleocene Neogastropoda Fossil--South Dakota Fossil--North Dakota text 1990 ftunivndakota 2023-05-07T17:30:14Z The Cannonball Formation of Paleocene age is a shallow-marine, clastic sequence exposed primarily in southwest-central North Dakota and northwestern South Dakota. The formation is characterized by alternating, poorly consolidated, relatively thin sandstone and thick mudstone units. The Cannonball neogastropod families Melongenidae, Fasciolariidae, and Turridae contain 20 species assigned to 15 genera based on 334 individuals from 50 localities. Four genera, Alticollarum, Obtusicarina, Vitticoncha, and Ericksonia are new, whereas Serrifusus, Mesorhytis, Rhombopsis, and Deussenia are first reported occurrences from Tertiary strata. Marshallaria is newly reported from North America and likely from the Northern Hemisphere. Twelve species are additions to the Cannonball fauna; of these, Acamptogenotia varicosta, Serrifusus sohli, Deussenia minuta, and Ericksonia clivilinea are newly described. Mesorhytis dakotensis is the most abundant species; the other species are generally rare. No stratigraphic zonation of species was observed. The middle informal unit has the most diverse fauna with 16 species, followed by that of the lower with 15 and the upper with 11. The larger number of occurrences is in the sandstone lithology, whereas the greater number of individuals occurs in the mudstone. Cluster analyses indicate little or no correlation between substrate type and species occurrence and that these neogastropods have no paleoenvironmental significance. These neogastropods are inferred to have been semi-infaunal or shallow infaunal predators. Comparisons between the neogastropod faunas of the Cannonball and Late Cretaceous Fox Hills and Pierre Formations suggest that 60 percent of the Late Cretaceous genera and all of the species became extinct prior to Cannonball time. Five Cannonball neogastropods occur in the Agatdal Formation of West Greenland, two in the "greensands" of Copenhagen, Denmark, and one in the Aquia Formation of Maryland and Virginia. A northerly or northeasterly source for the Cannonball Sea is ... Text Greenland UND Scholarly Commons (University of North Dakota) Greenland
institution Open Polar
collection UND Scholarly Commons (University of North Dakota)
op_collection_id ftunivndakota
language unknown
topic Geology--South Dakota
Geology--North Dakota
Geology
Stratigraphic--Paleocene
Neogastropoda
Fossil--South Dakota
Fossil--North Dakota
spellingShingle Geology--South Dakota
Geology--North Dakota
Geology
Stratigraphic--Paleocene
Neogastropoda
Fossil--South Dakota
Fossil--North Dakota
Silfer, Brian E.
Neogastropods (Melongenidae, Fasciolariidae, Turridae) from the Cannonball Formation (Paleocene: Thanetian), North Dakota and South Dakota
topic_facet Geology--South Dakota
Geology--North Dakota
Geology
Stratigraphic--Paleocene
Neogastropoda
Fossil--South Dakota
Fossil--North Dakota
description The Cannonball Formation of Paleocene age is a shallow-marine, clastic sequence exposed primarily in southwest-central North Dakota and northwestern South Dakota. The formation is characterized by alternating, poorly consolidated, relatively thin sandstone and thick mudstone units. The Cannonball neogastropod families Melongenidae, Fasciolariidae, and Turridae contain 20 species assigned to 15 genera based on 334 individuals from 50 localities. Four genera, Alticollarum, Obtusicarina, Vitticoncha, and Ericksonia are new, whereas Serrifusus, Mesorhytis, Rhombopsis, and Deussenia are first reported occurrences from Tertiary strata. Marshallaria is newly reported from North America and likely from the Northern Hemisphere. Twelve species are additions to the Cannonball fauna; of these, Acamptogenotia varicosta, Serrifusus sohli, Deussenia minuta, and Ericksonia clivilinea are newly described. Mesorhytis dakotensis is the most abundant species; the other species are generally rare. No stratigraphic zonation of species was observed. The middle informal unit has the most diverse fauna with 16 species, followed by that of the lower with 15 and the upper with 11. The larger number of occurrences is in the sandstone lithology, whereas the greater number of individuals occurs in the mudstone. Cluster analyses indicate little or no correlation between substrate type and species occurrence and that these neogastropods have no paleoenvironmental significance. These neogastropods are inferred to have been semi-infaunal or shallow infaunal predators. Comparisons between the neogastropod faunas of the Cannonball and Late Cretaceous Fox Hills and Pierre Formations suggest that 60 percent of the Late Cretaceous genera and all of the species became extinct prior to Cannonball time. Five Cannonball neogastropods occur in the Agatdal Formation of West Greenland, two in the "greensands" of Copenhagen, Denmark, and one in the Aquia Formation of Maryland and Virginia. A northerly or northeasterly source for the Cannonball Sea is ...
format Text
author Silfer, Brian E.
author_facet Silfer, Brian E.
author_sort Silfer, Brian E.
title Neogastropods (Melongenidae, Fasciolariidae, Turridae) from the Cannonball Formation (Paleocene: Thanetian), North Dakota and South Dakota
title_short Neogastropods (Melongenidae, Fasciolariidae, Turridae) from the Cannonball Formation (Paleocene: Thanetian), North Dakota and South Dakota
title_full Neogastropods (Melongenidae, Fasciolariidae, Turridae) from the Cannonball Formation (Paleocene: Thanetian), North Dakota and South Dakota
title_fullStr Neogastropods (Melongenidae, Fasciolariidae, Turridae) from the Cannonball Formation (Paleocene: Thanetian), North Dakota and South Dakota
title_full_unstemmed Neogastropods (Melongenidae, Fasciolariidae, Turridae) from the Cannonball Formation (Paleocene: Thanetian), North Dakota and South Dakota
title_sort neogastropods (melongenidae, fasciolariidae, turridae) from the cannonball formation (paleocene: thanetian), north dakota and south dakota
publisher UND Scholarly Commons
publishDate 1990
url https://commons.und.edu/theses/278
https://commons.und.edu/context/theses/article/1277/viewcontent/Silfer__Brian_E.__MS_Thesis_1990.pdf
https://commons.und.edu/context/theses/article/1277/filename/0/type/additional/viewcontent/Silfer_Plates.zip
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre Greenland
genre_facet Greenland
op_source Theses and Dissertations
op_relation https://commons.und.edu/theses/278
https://commons.und.edu/context/theses/article/1277/viewcontent/Silfer__Brian_E.__MS_Thesis_1990.pdf
https://commons.und.edu/context/theses/article/1277/filename/0/type/additional/viewcontent/Silfer_Plates.zip
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