IV. Cyrtoctenus gen. nov., a large late Palaeozoic Arthropod with pectinate Appendages
- 1 January 1968
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
- Vol. 68 (4) , 63-104
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0080456800014563
Abstract
It is confirmed that the type species of the genus Glyptoscorpius Peach 1882 is a subjective synonym of Adelophthalmus Jordan and Meyer 1854. Species which have been referred to Glyptoscorpius are reviewed and their present taxonomic position defined. Cyrtoctenus gen. nov., type species Cyrtoctenus peachi sp. nov., is designated to accommodate forms bearing five pairs of specialised abdominal appendages of which the first is comb-like. Four species of Cyrtoctenus from Devonian and Carboniferous rocks in Scotland, England, Belgium and Czechoslovakia are recognized. The structure and affinities of these forms are discussed with special reference to the comb-like appendages and their ornamentation in relation to these features in other arthropods. In particular the development of filaments and fulcra from different types of scales is discussed. The characters of the new genus are found to be so distinctive as to require the creation of the new order Cyrtoctenida for its accommodation.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- I.—Further Observations on the Scottish Carboniferous EurypteridsTransactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1968
- XII.—The Scottish Carboniferous EurypteridaTransactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1958
- The Cove Marine Bands in East Lothian and their Relation to the Ironstone Shale and Limestone of Redesdale, NorthumberlandGeological Magazine, 1952
- Carboniferous Palaeoniscids from Northumberland and BerwickshireGeological Magazine, 1938
- The Tuedian Beds of Northern Cumberland and Roxburghshire East of the Liddel WaterQuarterly Journal of the Geological Society, 1931
- XI.—The Fish-Fauna of the Cementstones of Foulden, BerwickshireTransactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1927
- I. Note on a Specimen of “Glyptoscorpius” from the Coal Measures of Airdrie, the property of Robert Dunlop, of BailliestonTransactions of the Geological Society of Glasgow, 1907
- XXXII.—The Canonbie Coalfield: its Geological Structure and Relations to the Carboniferous Rocks of the North of England and Central ScotlandTransactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1905
- X. Note on the existence in the king crab ( Limulus polyphemus ) of stigmata corresponding to the respiratory stigmata of the pulmonate arachnida, and on the morphological agreements between Limulus and ScorpioProceedings of the Royal Society of London, 1881
- XXI.—Further Researches among the Crustacea and Arachnida of the Carboniferous Rocks of the Scottish BorderTransactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 1881