Stephanoceras

{{Short description|Genus of molluscs (fossil)}}

{{Automatic taxobox

|fossil_range = {{fossil range|Aalenian|Bajocian|ref={{cite web

| last = Sepkoski| first = Jack| title= Sepkoski's Online Genus Database|author-link =| year = 2002| url = http://strata.geology.wisc.edu/jack/showgenera.php?taxon=231&rank=class| accessdate = 2014-05-28 }}}}

|image = Stephanoceras-1.jpg

|image_caption = S. humphriesianum,
(lower Bajocian, Middle Jurassic), Sherborne, Dorset, UK.

|taxon = Stephanoceras

|authority = Waagen, 1869

}}

Stephanoceras (meaning crown horn) is an extinct genus of Stephanoceratoid ammonite which lived during the Bajocian (Middle Jurassic).{{cite web

| last = Sepkoski| first = Jack| title= Sepkoski's Online Genus Database|author-link =| year = 2002| url = http://strata.geology.wisc.edu/jack/showgenera.php?taxon=231&rank=class| accessdate = 2014-05-28 }} It is the type genus of the family Stephanoceratidae.

Type species

Ammonites humphriesianum J. de C. Sowerby, 1825,Sowerby, J. de C. 1823 – 1846. Mineral Choncology, vols. 5 – 7. London. subsequent designation by Buchman, 1898Arkell, W. J. 1957. In Moore, R. C. (ed.) Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Part L: Mollusca 4: Cephalopoda, Ammonoidea. Geol. Soc. Am. and Univ. Kansas Press, Lawrence.

Selected species

  • S. humphriesianum (J. de C. Sowerby 1825) - Type species
  • S. blagdeni (Sowerby)
  • S. brodeaei (J. Sowerby)
  • S. mutabile (Quenstedt 1886)
  • S. umbilicum (Quenstedt 1886)
  • S. nodosum (Quenstedt 1886)
  • S. macrum (Quenstedt 1886)
  • S. pyritosum (Quenstedt 1886)
  • S. triplex Weisert
  • S. freycineti (Bayle)
  • S. kreter (Buckman)
  • S. leptogyrale (Buckman)
  • S. boulderense Imlay 1982
  • S. coronatus (Bruguiere 1789)
  • S. quenstedti Кoche 1939
  • S. skidegatense Whiteaves 1876

[http://gni.globalnames.org/name_strings?commit=Search&page=3&search_term=stephanoceras Global Names Index]

Description

Stephanoceras has an evolute shell, as characteristic of the family, with well-developed ribbing and tubercles. The shell is coiled so whorls barely touch in most, but some have notable overlap. Primary ribs emerge from the umbilical seam, the line marking the inner edge of the particular exposed whorl, and divide on the flanks, usually in two, occasionally in three, forming secondary ribs that cross the outer rim of the shell, known as the venter, uninterrupted. Turbercles, elevated projections, form at the ends of the primary ribs where they bifurcate or sometimes trifurcate.

Stephanoceras grew to be fairly large with a shell diameter as much as 27 cm and width as much as 6 cm across the outer whorl. Like many ammonites, Stephanoceras is dimorphic with a large, macroconch, form thought to be female and a small, microconch, form thought to be male. In most aspects the microconch is simply a smaller version of the macroconch. The primary difference lies in the aperture, which in the microconch has planar extensions on either side, lappets. That of the macroconch is generally simple, preceded by a constriction.

Distribution

Fossils of Stephanoceras are found in the Jurassic marine strata of Canada, Mexico, Saudi Arabia and Spain.{{cite web | title= Paleobiology Database|author-link =| year = | url = https://paleobiodb.org/classic/checkTaxonInfo?taxon_no=15667| access-date = 17 December 2021 }} Some species, including S.coronatus and S.humphriesianum can also be found in rocks of the same age from England and Germany.{{Cite web|title=A Catalogue and Bibliography of North American Mesozoic Invertebrata, Vol. 8, Ed. 102|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VKc9AAAAIAAJ&q=Stephanoceras+humphreysianum&pg=PA270|author=Cornelius Breckinridge Boyle|website=|year = 1893|access-date=22 May 2020}}

Gallery

File:S. humphriesianum - Clatcombe Dorset.jpg|Stephanoceras humphriesianum, Jurassic, Inferior Oolite, Humphriesianum Zone, Clatcombe, Dorset, UK. Size of ammonite 275mm.

File:Stephanoceratidae - Stephanoceras blagdeni.JPG|Stephanoceras blagdeni from Mid Jurassic - Germany.

''References''

  • Arkell, et al. 1957. Mesozoic Ammonoidea, Treatise on invertebrate Paleontology, Part L, Mollusca 4. Geol Soc of America and Univ of Kansas press, Lawrence.
  • Galacz, A. 1991. Bajocian Sephanoceratid Ammonites from the Bakony Mountains, Hungary. Palaeontology, Vol 34, Pt 4, 1991, pp 859–885.
  • Sandoval, J. & Westermann, G. E. G. 1986. The Bajocian (Jurassic) ammonite fauna of Oaxaca, Mexico; Jour Paleo V.67, N.6, p. 1220, November 1986

{{Reflist}}

{{Taxonbar|from=Q3726721}}

Category:Jurassic ammonites

Category:Jurassic ammonites of Europe

Category:Jurassic ammonites of North America

Category:Ammonitida genera

Category:Stephanoceratoidea