Stone, Philip
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5143-121X; Crame, James Alistair
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5027-9965.
2026
Concerning the historical holotype of the Cretaceous bivalve Lahillia larseni.
Antarctic Science.
1-3.
10.1017/S0954102025100540
Abstract
The first fossil fauna to be described from the Antarctic was collected at Seymour Island in December 1892 by Captain Carl Anton Larsen and the crew of the Norwegian whaling ship Jason . Some specimens collected by Larsen’s crew were acquired by Charles Donald, the surgeon with an 1892–1893 Scottish whaling expedition from Dundee that was also operating in the vicinity of Seymour Island. Donald returned the fossils to Scotland, and they were described in two papers published by The Royal Society of Edinburgh (1894 and 1899) as, inter alia , two new species of Palaeogene bivalves and one of Cretaceous to Palaeocene age. Sadly, the described Palaeogene specimens are now lost, but one Cretaceous/Palaeocene survivor, the holotype of Lahillia larseni , has been located in the palaeontology collection of the British Geological Survey with the reference number FOR 4053. On Seymour Island, Lahillia larseni is a common species in both Upper Cretaceous and Palaeocene strata and is of particular importance as its abundance seems to have been unaffected by the end-Cretaceous extinction.
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541317:272918
Open Access Paper
concerning-the-historical-holotype-of-the-cretaceous-bivalve-lahillia-larseni.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution 4.0.
concerning-the-historical-holotype-of-the-cretaceous-bivalve-lahillia-larseni.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution 4.0.
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Programmes:
BGS Programmes 2020 > National geoscience
BAS Programmes 2015 > Organisational
BAS Programmes 2015 > Organisational
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