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7.2: Large brachiopod that easily forms attachments

  • Page ID
    45091
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    Brachiopoda, Terebratulida: Liothyrella sp.

    Liothyrella are medium to large-sized, short-looped brachiopods. Fossils are known from the Eocene and Oligocene of Aotearoa New Zealand and living species are known from New Zealand, Antarctica and South America.

    The image shows Liothyrella brachiopods in two forms: as individual fossils and as a cluster preserved together in limestone. The individual fossils are displayed in two views so that the different sizes and shapes of the two shells in each fossil can be seen. The cluster of fossils shows multiple brachiopods grouped together, embedded in a limestone matrix. An illustration is also included, depicting how the brachiopod would have attached to a rock by its pedicle, which is a stalk-like structure. Scale bars indicate that the individual brachiopod fossils are approximately six centimetres long.

    Liothyrella brachiopods as individual fossils and as a cluster preserved together in limestone. An illustration shows how the brachiopod would have attached to a rock by its pedicle. Image credit: JH Robinson, with illustration adapted from Richardson (1981).

    Liothyrella is invariably attached to a hard substrate. Living individuals are often found in large clusters, all attached to each other. We know this also happened in fossil populations as well as the pedicle attachment to the shells leave a distinctive trace (a trace fossil known as a podichnus).

    In the Ototara Limestone of North Otago, Liothyrella shells are sometimes very common in certain horizons. Their large shells, both live and dead, provided a substrate for many smaller invertebrates to attach to, including bryozoans, tube worms, barnacles, encrusting foraminifera and smaller ribbed brachiopods such as Terebratulina.

    —Written by Jeffrey H Robinson

    Specimen number: OU 47988 (single shell), OU 47989 (small block with 3 shells) Age: 34.6 million years old (late Eocene, Whaingaroan stage)
    Locality: Kakanui, North Otago Rock Formation: Ototara Limestone
    Collected by: ZD Bowen and JD Campbell  
    Citation: Robinson JH. 2004. Brachiopod and molluscan faunas of Everett’s Quarry, Kakanui. Unpublished MSc thesis, Department of Geology, University of Otago.

    This page titled 7.2: Large brachiopod that easily forms attachments is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Daniel B Thomas, Jeffrey H Robinson, and Daphne E Lee (Council of Australian University Librarians Initiative) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.