Tuesday, June 9, 2020

A clam for the ages

Venericardia is a widely distributed genus of shallow-marine bivalves (clams) in the family Carditidae. This genus was abundant during the Paleocene and Eocene epochs (a cumulative range of 66 to 34 million years ago). The highest biodiversity of Venericardia was in the Eocene. The genus needs detailed classification studies of all its various subgenera found throughout the world. Detailed studies are much needed to evaluate the likely possibly of over naming of species/subspecies found on the west coast of North America. The genus is now extinct, with the last survivors of this genus dying out apparently in the early Miocene.

Lamarck (1801) first described the genus Venericardia based on well preserved shells of this bivalve in the Paris Basin, France. The aragonite shells of this genus are commonly large and very sturdy, with wide radial ribs crossed by concentric growth lines on the exterior. The interior of the shells are characterized by long posterior teeth, much shorter anterior teeth, and two prominent elliptical-shaped muscle scars connected ventrally by a continuous line. Some species have prominent nodes along the inner margins of the shell.


These two images show the plaster replicas of the exterior and interior surfaces of a left-hand valve (6.5 cm high and 7 cm wide) of Venericardia planicosta Lamarck, 1801 from an Eocene shell bed at Grignon, Paris Basin, France. 


Venericardia (Pacificor) lutmani Turner, 1938, lower Eocene (Ypresian Stage), southwestern Oregon; plaster replicas. Left image is the exterior of a left valve, and the right image is the exterior of the right valve of a single specimen (9.25 cm high and 10 cm wide) which, upon burial, became separated from one another. 


These two images are the corresponding interior views of the same plaster replica shown immediately above.




Venericardia (Pacificor) hornii calafia Stewart, 1930, middle Eocene (Lutetian Stage), southern California. Exteriors of left-hand and corresponding right-hand valves of the same specimen (whose valves [9 cm high and 9 cm wide] are closed very tightly).



Dorsal (hinge) view of same specimen of V. (P.) h. calafia shown immediately above. Left valve is on the left side of image, and right valve is on the right side of image

Venericardia was an infaunal (burrowing) suspension feeder that lived buried just beneath the surface-water interface. Its optimum habitat was in relatively deep, shallow-marine (shelfal) environments, but its shells are commonly found as transported remains in coastal-storm beds.

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