5 research outputs found

    The middle Smithian (Early Triassic) ammonoid Arctoceras blomstrandi

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    The ammonoid genus Arctoceras (Hyatt) occurs across all palaeolatitudes, and is a key genus for middle Smithian biostratigraphical correlations globally. In this study, intraspecific variations in conch morphology, ornamentation and allometry are examined in relation to stratigraphic position. Arctoceras is the most abundant ammonoid genus in the middle Smithian of Svalbard. Originally, seven Arctoceras species were described from Svalbard. Later, as the importance of intraspecific variation was recognized, six of the Arctoceras species from Svalbard were treated as junior synonyms of Arctoceras blomstrandi (Lindström). Yet, the variations in A. blomstrandi conch morphology remain poorly quantified and the dependence on stratigraphic position, unknown. We quantify the intraspecific variation in conch morphology, ornamentation and allometry in relation to stratigraphy of the Svalbard Arctoceras. The results support the assignment of all Arctoceras morphotypes from Svalbard to a single species A. blomstrandi. The new data allow for an updated species description and open the way for the use in biostratigraphy of the endmember morphology A. blomstrandi var. costatus. We document consistent changes in conch morphology and ornamentation in the studied stratigraphic interval, with a distinct shift towards more evolute and ornate conchs in the top of the interval. The trends in the strength of ornamentation are partly explained by covariation with conch morphology (Buckman's law). The most marked shift in the conch morphology and allometric development of A. blomstrandi coincides with the onset of the positive carbon isotope excursion at the end of the middle Smithian, but pre‐dates the mid–late Smithian cooling of the sea surface
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