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Dactylioceras (Orthodactylites) semicelatum (Simpson 1843)


Ludwigia

7cm. From Kettleness near Whitby in Yorkshire, GB. Semicelatum subzone, tenuicostatum zone of the Whitby Mudstone Formation. Lowest Toarcian. I aquired this one from Byron Blessed at the Petrefakta last year.

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Hi Roger,

I was just researching Dactylioceras on Google whereupon I stumbled across this gallery image. I don't know if D. annulatum exists; but if it's from the tenuicostatum zone is certainly can't be a D. annulatum as there's only four 'grey shales Dacs' [D. crosbeyi, D. clevelandicum, D. semicelatum, and D. tenuicostatum]. I think your ammonite is actually a D. semicelatum.

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Hi Joe,

I got this ammonite from Byron Blessed from Fossils UK at the Petrefakta here in Germany where he had a stand and just took over the information on the ammonite from him. I figured he knew what he was talking about, but you obviously seem to have your doubts. Is annulatum maybe a synonym?

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Roger,

This ammonite is definitely a D. semicelatum - there's no other 'valid' species it can be. I should have made myself clearer earlier, but yes, I am pretty sure it's a synonym for D. semicelatum (or potentially, can't find the paper that confirms which yet, D. tenuicostatum). As far as I am aware D. annulatum is no longer considered valid.

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PS. I just found an old post of Byron's in a thread I started here a few years ago where he shows D.annulatum and says that it occurs together with D.semicelatum.

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Thanks for the link, Roger. I'm following Howarth's 1973, 'The Stratigraphy And Ammonite Fauna Of The Upper Liassic Grey Shales Of The Yorkshire Coast' - there's no mention of D. annulatum; just the aforementioned other four species.

Personally I would consider D. annulatum a synonym of D. semicelatum. I do not believe they occur together as different species, instead, there is just one valid genus.

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I don't have that publication myself (Do you have a pdf of it perhaps that you could send me?), but I do know that Byron refers to it. Maybe you should send him a message asking if he knows anything new about that species. Perhaps he could aid you in your research....or you could teach him something new...

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I just recieved an answer from Byron and he has corrected the ID and now it's clear that Ammojoe was right in his assumption.

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