J. L. Carter
Carnegie Museum of Natural History
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Annals of Carnegie Museum | 2014
J. L. Carter; David K. Brezinski; Albert D. Kollar; J. Thomas DutroJr
ABSTRACT Forty-six species, assignable to 36 brachiopod genera, are recognized, described, and illustrated from the Lower Mississippian Redwall Limestone of northern Arizona. Seven new species are recognized, four of which are named. Named species are: Spinocarinifera (Seminucella) costatula, new species; Magnumbonella ampla, new species; Setigerites gutschicki, new species; and Spirifer redwallensis , new species. The remaining three newly recognized species remain in open nomenclature because study material was too poorly preserved to justify naming. The majority of brachiopod species studied were recovered from the Thunder Springs and Mooney Falls members near the middle of the formation. The basal Whitmore Wash Member and uppermost Horseshoe Mesa Member contain only sparse and poorly preserved brachiopod material. The spotty stratigraphic distribution of collections, which were recovered from largely geographically disparate locations, resulted in the creation of a stratigraphic range chart that exhibits no recognizable segregation into any potential brachiopod zones. Many of the Redwall Limestones brachiopod species are known from contemporaneous formations elsewhere in the Cordillera or central United States. Biostratigraphically key species such as Marginatia fernglenensis (Weller, 1909), Marginatia burlingtonensis (Hall, 1858), Stegacanthia bowsheri Muir-Wood and Cooper, 1960, Fernglenia vernonensis (Swallow, 1860), Voiseyella novamexicana (Miller, 1881), and Punctospirifer subtexta (White, 1862), indicate that much of the Thunder Springs and Mooney Falls members is correlative with latest Kinderhookian (late Tournaisian) through latest Osagean (early Viséan) formations of the American Midcontinent. These correlations indicate that the Redwall Limestone is temporally equivalent to the Fern Glen-Burlington formations of the central United States. These correlations are consistent with other Redwall forms that are biostratigraphially useful, such as foraminifers.
Annals of Carnegie Museum | 2008
J. L. Carter; Albert D. Kollar; David K. Brezinski
Abstract Described from the Wymps Gap Member of the Mauch Chunk Formation of southwestern Pennsylvania and adjacent Maryland is a new species, Phyricodothyris lauriegrahamae, of the Upper Mississippian reticulariod brachiopod Phyricodothyris George, 1932. The Wymps Gap Limestone from which the type material was collected is middle Chesterian (late Viséan) in age. This is the first report of this genus from confirmed Mississippian rocks in North America.
Annals of Carnegie Museum | 1994
J. L. Carter; J. G. Johnson; Rémy Gourvennec; Hou Hong-Fei
Annals of Carnegie Museum | 1992
J. L. Carter
Annals of Carnegie Museum | 2000
Stanislav S Lazarev; J. L. Carter
Annals of Carnegie Museum | 1985
J. L. Carter
Digital Treatise | 2007
Fernando Alvarez; J. L. Carter; D. E. Lee; Rémy Gourvennec; N. M. Savage; David I. Mackinnon; P. G. Baker
Digital Treatise | 2006
J. L. Carter; Hou Hong-Fei; J. G. Johnson; Rémy Gourvennec
Digital Treatise | 2006
J. L. Carter; D. E. Lee; T. N. Smirnova; Jin Yugan; P. G. Baker; A. S. Dagys; Sun Dong-Li; David I. Mackinnon
Digital Treatise | 2006
J. L. Carter; Rémy Gourvennec; J. G. Johnson; Hou Hong-Fei