Grypoceratidae
Encyclopedia
Grypoceratidae is the longest lived family of the Trigonocerataceae
Trigonocerataceae
The Trigonocerataceae is a superfamily within the Nautilida that ranged from the Devonian to the Triassic that is thought to have contained the source for the Nautilaceae in which Nautilus is found....

, or of the near equivalent Centroceratina; members of the Nautilida
Nautilida
The Nautilida constitute a large and diverse order of generally coiled nautiloid cephalopods that began in the mid Paleozoic and continues to the present with a single family, the Nautilidae which includes two genera, Nautilus and Allonautilus, with six species...

 from the Upper Paleozoic and Triassic.(Kummel 1964)

Diagnosis

The Grypoceratidae are characterized by evolute to involute shells that may have some modification to the venter (the outer rim) varying from flattened to subangular, or bearing a keel. Most are smooth but some have nodes or carinae (auxiliary keels). Sutures generally have distinct ventral and lateral lobes but in some, a ventral saddle. Whorl sections are generally compressed but may be subquadrate to subtrapizoidal or coronate (heart shaped), or slightly depressed dorso-ventrally. (Flower 1950, Kummel 1964)

Phylogeny and genera

The Grypoceratidae begin with Epidomatodceras from the Lower Carboniferous (Mississippian), an evolute form with a smooth shell, subquadrate whorl section, and a sharp angular ventral lobe in the suture. Epidomatoceras is followed by Domatoceras, Paradomatoceras, Stearoceras, Stenopoceras, and Titanoceras from the Upper Carboniferous (Pennsylvanian) and Lower Permian.

Domatoceras, Paradomatoceras, and Titanoceras are rather similar in that they are somewhat large, evolute with whorls in contact but not deeply impressed along the inner margin of the whorls, and with straight flanks and flattened venters. Whorl sections vary from stongly compressed side to side with height much greater than width in Paradomatoceras to slightly depressed with height less than width in Titanoceras, with Domatoceras subquadrate in between.

Stearoceras is involute with a depressed subtrapizoidal whorl section and slight ventral and lateral lobes. Stenoporceras is subdiscoidal, flattened laterally, and has a suture with broad lateral lobes and a deep ventral saddle as found in syringonautilids
Syringonautilidae
The Syringonautilidae comprise the last of the Trigonocerataceae and are the source for the Nautilaceae which continued the Nautiloidea through the Mesozoic and into the Cenozoic right down to the recent. The Syringonautilidae, itself, is a strictly Triassic family, derived early in the Triassic...

.

Permian genera include Parastenopoceras, a smooth, involute form with a semiellptical whorl section and ventral saddle; Plummeroceras, a form similar to Domatoceras but more evolute and with a deep ventral lobe; Pselioceras, a smooth evolute form with a perforate umbilicus, ovoid whorl section, and suture crossing straight over the venter; and Virgaloceras, also similar to Domatoceras but with a row of nodes on the umbilical wall and a ventral saddle instead of the ventral lobe in the suture. Parastenopoceras, Plummeroceras, and Pselioceras are from the Lower Permian; Virgaloceras is from the Upper Permian.

The last three genera are from the Triassic, none having crossed from the Permian. Grypoceras, given simply a Triassic, is like Domatoceras but tendiing to be more involute and to have more rounded ventral shoulders. Menuthionautilus from the Lower Triassic has a rapidly expanding, smooth involute shell with a deep dorsal impression, broadly convex flanks and rounded venter, suture with a shallow ventral lobe and siphuncle positioned against the venter. Gryponautilus from the Upper Triassic is broadly involute with a narrowly rounded, keel-like venter at maturity and shallow ventral and lateral lobes in the suture.

All members of the Grypoceratidae have a ventral lobe with the exception of Stenoporceras, Parastenopoceras, and Virgaloceras, which have a ventral saddle instead. The derivation of these three within the Grypoceratidae is uncertain. Stenopoceras or Parastenopoceras is the likely ancestor of the Syringonautilidae from the Triassic

Generic descriptions from Kummel 1964 in the Treatise Part K
Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology
The Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology published by the Geological Society of America and the University of Kansas Press, is a definitive multi-authored work of some 50 volumes, written by more than 300 paleontologists, and covering every phylum, class, order, family, and genus of fossil and...

pp K432 -K436

Comparison of Taxonomies

The taxonomy of the Grypoceratidae of Kummel (1964) in the Treatise is straight forward with no attempt to define subdivisions within the family. The taxonony of the Centroceratina of Shimansky (1962) in Kummel (1964) is more involved. Shimansky first of all divided the Centroceratina into two superfamilies, the Tribolocerataceae with one family and the Centrocerataceae with six families. Among the Centroceratacea the Domatoceratidae and Grypoceratidae (sensu Shimansky) are equivalent to the Gypoceratidae of the Treatise. The Domatoceratidae which include forms with ventral lobes and ventral saddles extends from the Caboniferous barely into the Triassic. The Grypoceratidae of Shimansky contains the Triassic genera of Kummel's larger Grypoceraidae and are derived, probably in the Late Permian, from the more restricted Domatoceratidae. (Kummel 1964)
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
x
OK