Nacre in Molluscs from the Ordovician of the Midwestern United States
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Vendrasco, Michael J.; Checa González, Antonio G.; Heimbrock, William P.; Baumann, Steven D.J.Editorial
MDPI
Materia
Nacre Ordovician Isorthoceras
Fecha
2013-01-08Referencia bibliográfica
Vendrasco, M.J. et. al. Geosciences 2013, 3, 1-29. [https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences3010001]
Patrocinador
Project CGL2010-20748-CO2-01 of the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación; Project RNM6433 of the Andalusian Consejería de Innovación Ciencia y TecnologíaResumen
Nacre was previously thought to be primitive in the Mollusca, but no convincing
Cambrian examples are known. This aragonitic microstructure with crystal tablets that
grow within an organic framework is thought to be the strongest, most fracture-resistant
type of shell microstructure. Fossils described herein from the Ordovician of Iowa, Indiana,
and Ohio provide supporting evidence for the hypothesis that sometime between the middle
Cambrian and late Ordovician, nacre originated in cephalopod, bivalve, and possibly
gastropod lineages. The correlation of independent origins of fracture-resistant nacre with
increasing shell-crushing abilities of predators during the Cambrian-Ordovician suggests
an early pulse in the evolutionary arms race between predators and molluscan prey.





