A new Late Famennian lungfish from New South Wales,Australia, and its bearing on Australian-Asian terrane relations |
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Authors: | Zerina Johanson Alexander Ritchie |
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Affiliation: | Palaeontology Section , Australian Museum , 6 College Street, Sydney, NSW, 2010, Australia E-mail: zerinaj@austmus.gov.au |
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Abstract: | A new genus and species of lungfish with toothplates, Adelargo schultzei, is described from the Hunter Siltstone (Devonian, Late Famennian) near Grenfell, New South Wales. Materials assigned to Adelargo schultzei gen. et sp. nov., include a portion of the left side of the skull comprising B, I (postparietal) and J (parietal) bones, pterygoid and prearticular toothplates, a parasphenoid with a long posterior stalk, vertebrae, ribs, anal fin supports and scales. Toothplates are similar to Dipterus, although morphology of the skull, parasphenoid and postcranial elements is more derived. Biogeographic relationships of the Grenfell fauna were based on the presence of the antiarch group Sinolepidoidei, also present on Asian terranes during the Late Devonian. A small number of lungfish scales have been described from Asian sinolepid localities of this age, but differ from those of Adelargo schultzei, and other faunal similarities between these areas appear limited. Paucity of eastern Australian Devonian taxa on the North and South China blocks implies that strong biogeographic relationships between eastern Australia and Euramerican localities during the Late Devonian were not the result of Asian migration routes, but the closer proximity of these areas. |
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Keywords: | Dipnoi Adelargo Hunter Siltstone New South Wales Famennian North China Block South China Block biogeography |
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