Title of article
A new hypothesis for the origin of the supposed giant snail Dinocochlea from the Wealden of Sussex, England
Author/Authors
Taylor، نويسنده , , Paul D. and Sendino، نويسنده , , Consuelo، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
9
From page
492
To page
500
Abstract
When first described in 1922, Dinocochlea ingens, an Early Cretaceous (Valanginian) fossil from the Wadhurst Clay Formation (Wealden) of Hastings in Sussex, England, was regarded as the steinkern of a huge gastropod over 2 m in length and claimed to be the largest gastropod ever to have lived. Most subsequent researchers have doubted the identity of D. ingens as a gastropod, usually believing it to be a pseudofossil, but no convincing explanation has been proposed for its origin. Restudy of the type material leads to the new hypothesis that Dinocochlea originated as a horizontal, corkscrew-shaped burrow resembling Helicodromites that acted as a nucleus for concretion growth. Sectioned specimens of Dinocochlea are filled with concentrically banded sediment interpreted to be growth rings of a concretion. Modification of a computer simulation designed to illustrate gastropod shell growth shows how the development of a concretion around a corkscrew-shaped burrow could lead to the morphology seen in Dinocochlea. The most likely tracemaker for Dinocochlea was a capitellid polychaete (‘threadworm’) with a body just a few mm in diameter.
Keywords
Concretion , Cretaceous , Ichnofossil , Wealden , Gastropoda
Journal title
Proceedings of the Geologists Association
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Proceedings of the Geologists Association
Record number
2323810
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