. Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences. Natural history -- New York (State); Natural history. 137. Fig. 20. Monotrypa fruticosa. A specimen of the natural size, and a portion of the surface enlarged (after Hall.). (Hall.) (Fig. Foss., Pis. 21.) {Chsetetes XXXVII. and of the branches; ealices of monticules larger than those on remainder of branches; tab- ulae remote,except near the surface, where they are nu- merous. Found in the Moscow shale, three to five feet above the Encrinal lime- stone, at Section 5; also in the Demissa bed of Section 5; between ten and fifteen feet below


. Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences. Natural history -- New York (State); Natural history. 137. Fig. 20. Monotrypa fruticosa. A specimen of the natural size, and a portion of the surface enlarged (after Hall.). (Hall.) (Fig. Foss., Pis. 21.) {Chsetetes XXXVII. and of the branches; ealices of monticules larger than those on remainder of branches; tab- ulae remote,except near the surface, where they are nu- merous. Found in the Moscow shale, three to five feet above the Encrinal lime- stone, at Section 5; also in the Demissa bed of Section 5; between ten and fifteen feet below the Encrinal lime- stone, at Section 7, and in the Pleuroclictyum beds of Avery's Creek (rather rare). Monotrypa (?) furcata. furcatus. Hall. 111. Dev XXXVIII.) Distinguishing Characters.—branch- ing form similar to the preceding, from which it differs chiefly in the absence of the monticules, and in the transversely-ridged appearance of the corallites. (On a number of speci- mens, apparently of this species, spines or acanthopores occur at the angle of junction of the corallites, a feature which would demand the removal of the species to another genus. See Ulrich, Paleozoic Bryozoa, Palaeontology of Illinois, Vol. VIII., Part II., Section 6,1890.) Found in the Demissa bed, at Section 5, and two to four feet below the Trilobite beds, at Avery's Creek. Monotrypa amplectens. sp. now (Fig. 22.) Distinguishing Characters.— Encrusting habit; uniform, rather large, and regularly distributed monticules, the calices of which are larger than those of the main mass; small, new. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences. Buffalo, N. Y. : The Society


Size: 1550px × 1612px
Photo credit: © Book Worm / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectnaturalhistory, booky