Normalograptus kufraensis, a new species of graptolite from the western margin of the Kufra Basin, Libya
Page, Alex
Meinhold, Guido
Le Heron, Daniel P.
Elgadry, Mohamed
150, 04: 743 - 755
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0016756812000787
Persistent URL: http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gldocs-11858/6828
Persistent URL: http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gldocs-11858/6828
Page, Alex; Meinhold, Guido; Le Heron, Daniel P.; Elgadry, Mohamed, 2013: Normalograptus kufraensis, a new species of graptolite from the western margin of the Kufra Basin, Libya. In: Geological Magazine, Band 150, 04: 743 - 755, DOI: 10.1017/S0016756812000787.
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Normalograptus kufraensis sp. nov. occurs as monospecific assemblages in the Tanezzuft
Formation at the western margin of the Kufra Basin (Jabal Eghei), southern Libya. These graptolites
have parallel-sided rhabdosomes with long, straight virgellae, climacograptid thecae and a full
straight median septum. N. kufraensis is intermediate between Ordovician graptolites from the
N. angustus (Perner) lineage and the younger sister species N. ajjeri (Legrand) and N. arrikini Legrand.
N. kufraensis differs from these taxa as follows: it is broader than N. angustus; it has greater thecal
spacing than N. ajjeri or N. arrikini. A table comparing measurements of N. kufraensis with 44 other
Normalograptus taxa differentiates it from other members of this morphologically conservative group.
Even though N. angustus and N. ajjeri are very long-ranging graptolites, a stratophenetic approach
suggests that the specimens from Jabal Eghei may be of late Hirnantian or younger age. The faunal
composition and preservation suggests these graptolites occupied the ‘cratonic invader’ biotope. The
stratigraphic succession records deglacial flooding and fluctuating of redox in the Tanezzuft Formation,
with the graptolites indicating a short-lived interval of anoxia.