Petroxestes

Petroxestes pera borings in an Upper Ordovician hardground (Whitewater Formation, southern Ohio).

Petroxestes is a shallow, elongate boring (a type of trace fossil) originally found excavated in carbonate skeletons and hardgrounds of the Upper Ordovician of North America (Wilson and Palmer, 1988, 2006). These Ordovician borings were likely made by the mytilacean bivalve Corallidomus as it ground a shallow groove in the substrate to maintain its feeding position (Pojeta and Palmer, 1976). They are thus the earliest known bivalve borings (Taylor and Wilson, 2003). Petroxestes was later described from the Lower Silurian of Anticosti Island (Canada) by Tapanila and Copper (2002) and the Miocene of the Caribbean by Pickerill et al. (2001).

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/8/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.