Elimia tenera

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Elimia tenera
Temporal range: Early to Middle Eocene, 51–46  Ma
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Elimia tenera shells with ostracod shells
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Subclass: Caenogastropoda
Family: Pleuroceridae
Genus: Elimia
Species:
E. tenera
Binomial name
Elimia tenera
(Hall, 1845)
Elimia tenera in chalcedony from Wyoming Elimia fossils Wyoming.jpg
Elimia tenera in chalcedony from Wyoming

Elimia tenera, formerly known as Goniobasis tenera, is an extinct species of freshwater snail with an operculum, in the aquatic gastropod mollusk family Pleuroceridae. [1] This species flourished during the Eocene and is now known only from the fossil record. The genus name Elimia was restored to this species in 1975; [2] formerly it was placed in Goniobasis .

Contents

Fossilized Elimia tenera shells occur in a region which is now southern Wyoming, northern Colorado and northeastern Utah. The best preserved Elimia tenera are from Lake Gosiute which fossils occur in the Fort Laclede Bed of the Laney Member at outcrops in Sweetwater County, in southwestern Wyoming. [3]

Paleoecology and paleogeology

Life restoration of E. tenera Elimia tenera.jpg
Life restoration of E. tenera

E. tenera occurs in fossil beds that are 46 to 51 million years old, in the Laney Member of the Green River Formation. [4] Evidence suggests that the Elimia tenera were deposited nearshore in a series of shallow lakes, which geologists have named the Fossil, Uinta and Gosiute Lakes. [5] The climate was subtropical and there were intermittent volcanic eruptions. [6]

'Turritella agate'

Fossil shells of E. tenera are hosted in chalcedony-rich sedimentary rock. This rock was originally incorrectly called Turritella agate. [7] It was named after the sea snail genus Turritella because of the resemblance of the freshwater snail shells to the Turritella fossils that are found in agate in Texas and California. The Wyoming fossil shells, however, are in a freshwater sedimentary deposit and identifiable as the genus Elimia, and are less-silicified than those in Texas and California.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Agate</span> Rock consisting of cryptocrystalline silica alternating with microgranular quartz

Agate is a variety of chalcedony, which comes in a wide variety of colors. Agates are primarily formed within volcanic and metamorphic rocks. The ornamental use of agate was common in Ancient Greece, in assorted jewelry and in the seal stones of Greek warriors, while bead necklaces with pierced and polished agate date back to the 3rd millennium BCE in the Indus Valley civilisation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Green River Formation</span> Geologic formation in the United States

The Green River Formation is an Eocene geologic formation that records the sedimentation in a group of intermountain lakes in three basins along the present-day Green River in Colorado, Wyoming, and Utah. The sediments are deposited in very fine layers, a dark layer during the growing season and a light-hue inorganic layer in the dry season. Each pair of layers is called a varve and represents one year. The sediments of the Green River Formation present a continuous record of six million years. The mean thickness of a varve here is 0.18 mm, with a minimum thickness of 0.014 mm and maximum of 9.8 mm.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Florissant Formation</span> National monument in the United States

The Florissant Formation is a sedimentary geologic formation outcropping around Florissant, Teller County, Colorado. The formation is noted for the abundant and exceptionally preserved insect and plant fossils that are found in the mudstones and shales. Based on argon radiometric dating, the formation is Eocene in age and has been interpreted as a lake environment. The fossils have been preserved because of the interaction of the volcanic ash from the nearby Thirtynine Mile volcanic field with diatoms in the lake, causing a diatom bloom. As the diatoms fell to the bottom of the lake, any plants or animals that had recently died were preserved by the diatom falls. Fine layers of clays and muds interspersed with layers of ash form "paper shales" holding beautifully-preserved fossils. The Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument is a national monument established to preserve and study the geology and history of the area.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fossil Butte National Monument</span> National monument in the United States

Fossil Butte National Monument is a United States National Monument managed by the National Park Service, located 15 miles (24 km) west of Kemmerer, Wyoming, United States. It centers on an assemblage of Eocene Epoch animal and plant fossils associated with Fossil Lake—the smallest lake of the three great lakes which were then present in what are now Wyoming, Utah, and Colorado. The other two lakes were Lake Gosiute and Lake Uinta. Fossil Butte National Monument was established as a national monument on October 23, 1972.

Driftwood Canyon Provincial Park is a provincial park in British Columbia, Canada. Driftwood Canyon Provincial Park covers 23 hectares of the Bulkley River Valley, on the east side of Driftwood Creek, a tributary of the Bulkley River, 10 km northeast of the town of Smithers. The park is accessible from Driftwood Road from Provincial Highway 16. It was created in 1967 by the donation of the land by the late Gordon Harvey (1913–1976) to protect fossil beds on the east side of Driftwood Creek. The beds were discovered around the beginning of the 20th century. The park lands are part of the asserted traditional territory of the Wet'suwet'en First Nation.

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<i>Elimia</i> Genus of gastropods

Elimia is a genus of freshwater snails with an operculum, aquatic gastropod mollusks in the family Pleuroceridae. Various species are found in creeks throughout much of the eastern and central United States and the Great Lakes region of Canada. Fossils have been found across the whole of the North American continent, including from the Paleocene of Mexico and the Eocene of California. They were formerly included in the genus Goniobasis, together with the western Juga species.

The lacy elimia, also known as the lacey elimia, scientific name Elimia crenatella, is a species of freshwater snail with a gill and an operculum, an aquatic gastropod mollusk in the family Pleuroceridae.

Elimia gibbera, the shouldered elimia, is a species of freshwater snails in the family Pleuroceridae. This species was endemic to Alabama, the United States, with records from the Coosa River. It is now considered extinct, the attributed cause is land-use change. Already in 1936, Calvin Goodrich wrote that "To a large extent, the goniobasic fauna of the Coosa Biver must be spoken of in the past tense".

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<i>Asineops</i> Extinct genus of fishes

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<i>Elimia virginica</i> Species of gastropod

Elimia virginica, common names the Piedmont elimia or Virginia river snail, is a species of freshwater snail with an operculum, an aquatic gastropod mollusc in the family Pleuroceridae.

<i>Tilia johnsoni</i> Extinct species of flowering plant

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Asterotrygon</span> Extinct genus of cartilaginous fishes

Asterotrygon is an extinct genus of stingray from the Eocene Green River Formation in Wyoming. Several complete skeletons representing juveniles, adults, males and females have been uncovered from the late early Eocene Fossil Butte Member of the formation. The type and only species, A. maloneyi, was named in 2004 on the basis of these fossils. Another stingray, Heliobatis, is also known from the formation. Asterotrygon is a primitive stingray closely related to the living family Urolophidae whose ancestors likely originated in the Indo-Pacific. It lived in Fossil Lake, a body of water that existed in a subtropical mountainous region for only about 2 million years.

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The paleofauna of the Eocene Okanagan Highlands consists of Early Eocene arthropods, vertebrates, plus rare nematodes and molluscs found in geological formations of the northwestern North American Eocene Okanagan Highlands. The highlands lake bed series' as a whole are considered one of the great Canadian Lagerstätten. The paleofauna represents that of a late Ypresian upland temperate ecosystem immediately after the Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum, and before the increased cooling of the middle and late Eocene to Oligocene. The fossiliferous deposits of the region were noted as early as 1873, with small amounts of systematic work happening in the 1880-90s on British Columbian sites, and 1920-30s for Washington sites. Focus and more detailed descriptive work on the Okanagan Highlands site started in the last 1970's. Most of the highlands sites are preserved as compression-impression fossils in "shales", but also includes a rare permineralized biota and an amber biota.

References

  1. Burch, J. B. (1989). North American Freshwater Snails. Malacological Publications, Hamburg, Michigan, OCLC   20559611
  2. Hartman, Joseph H. and Roth, Barry (1998) "Late Paleocene and Early Eocene Nonmarine Molluscan Faunal Change in the Bighorn Basin, Northwestern Wyoming and South-Central Montana" pp. 358-359 in Aubry, Marie-Pierre; Lucas, Spencer G. and Berggren, William A. (Eds.) (1998). Late Paleocene-early Eocene climatic and biotic events in the marine and biotic events in the marine and terrestrial records Columbia University Press, New York, pp. 323-379, ISBN   0-231-10238-0
  3. Graham, Kenneth Lee (1996). Rockhounding Wyoming. Falcon, Guilford, Connecticut, ISBN   1-56044-445-2
  4. "Laney Member of Green River Formation", United States Geological Survey
  5. "Green River Lakes" [ permanent dead link ], greenrivereocene.com
  6. Carroll, A. R. & Bohacs, K. M. (1999). "Stratigraphic classification of ancient lakes: Balancing tectonic and climatic controls". Geology. 27: pp. 99-102
  7. Dolenc, A. (1979). "Turritella agate - a new find in southwest Wyoming". Lapidary Journal 33(8): p. 1692