Geosciences (Mar 2023)

A Late Triassic Nuculanoid Clam (Bivalvia: Nuculanoidea) and Associated Mollusks: Implications for Luning Formation (Nevada, USA) Paleobathymetry

  • Mark A. S. McMenamin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences13030080
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
p. 80

Abstract

Read online

A silicified, thick-shelled, smooth-surfaced nuculanoid bivalve has been recovered using acid maceration of the Late Triassic (Carnian–Norian) strata of the Luning Formation, Nevada. Comparable modern nuculanoid clams inhabit water depths from 525 to 2562 m, and the living clam (an undescribed species of Pseudoneilonella from Caleta Sierra, Coquimbo, Chile) most similar to the fossil lives at 878–933 m. The Triassic nuculanoid clam (possibly a neilonellid) is inferred here to have inhabited marine waters at approximately 1000 m deep during the deposition of the Shaly Limestone Member of the Luning Formation. The acid maceration sample also produced a silicified specimen of an abyssochrysoid gastropod. The most similar living species to the fossil snail is Abyssochrysos brasilianus, an abyssochrysoid known to occur in water depths from 1540 to 620 m. This depth range also suggests an approximate 1000 m depositional depth for the silicified fossil-producing acid maceration sample from the Luning Formation. These new fossil discoveries falsify hypotheses that the ichthyosaurs (Shonisaurus popularis) of Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park, Nevada, USA, were deposited, respectively, in either shoreline deposits or in strata that accumulated above the storm wave base. Evidence is also presented here for the existence of a giant Triassic cephalopod that, by comparison with the modern Mesonychoteuthis, preferred water depths of approximately 1000 m.

Keywords