Yunnanocephalus is a genus of ptychopariidtrilobite. It lived during the late Atdabanian and Botomian stages, in what are currently Antarctica, Australia and China. It was a "moderately common" member of the Chengjiang Fauna.[1]Yunnanocephalus is the only genus currently assigned to the Yunnanocephalidae family.[2]
Description
Yunnanocephalus is a small (about 2 centimetres or 0.79 inches) trilobite with an inverted elongated egg-shaped outline. Its headshield (or cephalon) is ovate and twice as wide as long, slightly wider than and not confluent with the articulate middle part of the exoskeleton (or thorax). The raised central section (or glabella) is weakly defined, without clear furrows except for one defining the occipital ring, tapering forward, with the front straight and confluent with the eye ridges. The occipital ring is about as wide as the border and the axial rings of the thorax. The distance between the glabella and the frontal border is slightly wider that the border. The visual surface of the eye is rather small (about 20% of the length of the cephalon), with the front about halflength of the cephalon. The natural rupture line (or suture) anterior of the visual surface is parallel to the midline or converges slightly forward and from the back of the eye diverges to the middle of the widely rounded back edges of the cephalon. The thorax has 14 segments, with short triangular spines, the 3rd and 4th slightly wider than the frontal segments, and a small tailshield (or pygidium) consisting almost fully of the axis and post axial boss, with two vaguely defined axial rings.[3]
Y. longioccipitalis is known from the Lower Cambrian of Antarctica (Atdabanian, Shackleton Limestone, 81.9° S, 158.7° E).[5]
Y. macromelos has been found in the Lower Cambrian of Australia (Botomian, Mernmerna Formation, Angorichina station, east side of The Bunkers, 1 km S Balcoracana Creek, South-Australia, 31.2° S, 138.9° E).[6]
Y. yunnanensis occurs in the Lower Cambrian of China (Atdabanian, Yuanshan or Qiongzhusi Formation, Chengjiang biota, near Haikou, Anning, Jinning, Jingmacun, Kunming, Yunnan, 24.8° N, 102.6° E;[7] and Maotianshan Bed 4, 24.0° N, 102.0° E).[8]
^Moore, R.C. (1959). Arthropoda I - Arthropoda General Features, Proarthropoda, Euarthropoda General Features, Trilobitomorpha. Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Vol. Part O. Boulder, Colorado/Lawrence, Kansas: Geological Society of America/University of Kansas Press. pp. O212. ISBN0-8137-3015-5.
^Guang, Hou Xian; Aldridge, Richard J.; Bergstrom, Jan; Siveter, David J.; Siveter, Derek J.; Xian-Hong, Feng (2004). The Cambrian Fossils of Chengjiang, China: The Flowering of Early Animal Life. Oxford, U.K.: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN1-4051-0673-5.
^Palmer, A.R.; Rowell, A.J. (1995). "Early Cambrian trilobites from the Shackleton Limestone of the Central Mountains". Journal of Paleontology. 69 (6): 1–28. Bibcode:1995JPal...69S...1P. doi:10.1017/S0022336000061424. S2CID182206675. cited on Shanan Peters. "Shackleton Limestone; H-84 collections". Fossilworks. JSTOR1315607.
^Brock, G.A.; Patterson, J.R. (2004). "A new species of Tannuella (Helcionellida, Mollusca) from the Early Cambrian of South Australia". Memoirs of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists. 30: 133–143. cited on Pete Wagner. "MMF/58.3. Angorichina station, east side of The Bunkers, 1 km S Balcoracana Cr". fossilworks. Retrieved 17 December 2021.