Article: The Ramonalinids: a new family of mound-building bivalves of the Early Middle Triassic
Publication: Palaeontology
Volume:
52
Part:
6
Publication Date:
November
2009
Page(s):
1349
–
1361
Author(s):
Thomas E. Yancey, Mark A. Wilson and Allison C. S. Mione
Abstract
Ramonalina n. gen. is a large thick-shelled bivalve abundant in mounds preserved in the Gevanim Formation (late Anisian, Middle Triassic) of southern Israel. This bivalve was an edgewise-recliner with a flattened anteroventral (functionally basal) surface and partially fused valves. It is the basis of a new family, the Ramonalinidae, which is descended from the myalinids through adaptation to edgewise positioning. Ligamental attachment was inadequate to hold valves together on large adults, resulting in valve displacement followed by shell secretion in the apical area that fused valves together and caused irregular growth on abapical areas. The ramonalinids formed large, nearly monospecific mounds on firm mud substrates in shallow marine waters. These are the largest Middle Triassic bivalve mounds known.