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Litosphaeridium siphoniphorum ssp. siphoniphorum

Litosphaeridium siphoniphorum ssp. siphoniphorum

Autonym
Holotype: Cookson and Eisenack, 1958. pl.11, fig.8
Paratypes: Cookson and Eisenack, 1958
Locus typicus: Gingin area (Perth Basin), W Australia
Stratum typicum: Albian-Cenomanian

Original description: Cookson and Eisenack 1958, p. 44: Hystrichosphaeridium siphoniphorum
Diagnosis: Shell spherical or slightly oval, with a rather thick, granular wall, and approximately 13 hollow conical to tube-like processes of somewhat unequal width that are open to the exterior and have a slightly recurved margin. A large pylome has been present in some examples.

Davey and Williams 1966, p. 80-82: Litosphaeridium siphoniphorum
Diagnosis: Spherical to subspherical central body composed of thin endophragm and thick reticulate periphragm. Processes, composed of smooth periphragm, varying considerably in shape and size but commonly cylindrical or sub-conical and always hollow. Distal margin of processes entire or serrate. Hexagonal apical archaeopyle usually present. Number of processes 13, rarely 14 or 15, in specimen possessing an archaeopyle. Inferred tabulation 3", 6"", 5""", 1p, 1"""" and 0-2s.
Description: The periphragm of the central body at first sight appears to be granular, but at high magnification is seen to be reticulate. The processes, though normally cylindrical or subconical, can be mammiform or even saucer-shaped (Text-fig. 17), the latter being 4-5 Ám in heigth. Very occasionally closed processes are present being either apical processes or small sulcal processes.

Emended Description: Lucas-Clarke, 1984, p. 186
Skolochorate, apiculocavate cysts with subspherical central body, and a total of 16-17 discrete, hollow processes (three to four on operculum). Periphragm ornament, which is granulate to reticulate, extends onto the processes and becomes finer toward the process tips. Endophragm ornament, which is more finely granular and "spongy" than that on periphragm, visibly only beneath processes. Processes bulbous, conical, or subcylindrical; wide at base, covering most of the cyst body surface, but basal outline not angular. Process tips truncated or constricted or slightly flared, generally thickened into a rim. Process shafts subcircular in cross-section. Processes represent paraplates B, Ci, Cu (process not always present), 1u, 1i, 2-6, II-VI, X, Y. Processes no more than one per paraplate. Apical processes open or closed; others open. Archeopyle apical, operculum free; cingular and sulcal processes absent.
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