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Hystrichosphaeridium placacanthum

Hystrichosphaeridium placacanthum Deflandre and Cookson, 1955

Now Systematophora. Originally Hystrichosphaeridium, subsequently Baltisphaeridium, thirdly Impletosphaeridium, fourthly (and now) Systematophora.
Tax. sr. synonym of Cleistosphaeridium panniforme (Gerlach, 1961) Stover and Evitt, 1978, according to Sarjeant, 1984.Tax. sr. synonym of Systematophora ancyrea Cookson and Eisenack, 1965, according to Stover and Evitt, 1978. Lentin and Williams, 1981, retained Systematophora ancyrea as a separate species.
Holotype: Deflandre and Cookson, 1955, pl.9, figs.1-2
Locus typicus: Victoria, Australia
Stratum typicum: Miocene

Original diagnosis: Deflandre and Cookson 1955, p. 276-277
Shell globular, circular or asymmetrical in outline, with a large number of processes that are aligned so as to divide the whole surface into more or less polygonal plate-like areas or fields. Each field is separated from its neighbours by an area devoid of appendages. Processes solid, of variable form, somewhat flexuous, simple or branched with pointed or hammer-shaped extremities, widening at the base. Sometimes the bases of 2 or more processes are connected by bridge-like strands; occasionally the apices may coalesce or be connected by a delicate thread as in Cannosphaeropsis. The fields seem to be of variable size and to have no special equatorial arrangement. The surface of the shell is finely reticulate.

Shell globular, circular or asymmetrical in outline, with a large number of processes that are aligned so as to divide the whole surface into more or less polygonal plate-like areas or fields. Each field is separated from its neighbours by an area devoid of appendages. Processes solid, of variable form, somewhat flexuous, simple or branched with pointed or hammer-shaped extremities, widening at the base. Sometimes the bases of 2 or more processes are connected by bridge-like strands; occasionally the apices may coalesce or be connected by a delicate thread as in Cannosphaeropsis. The fields seem to be of variable size and to have no special equatorial arrangement. The surface of the shell is finely reticulate.
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