Cordulagomphus
tuberculatus
Insect
Order Odonata, Family Proterogomphidae
Geological
Time: Lower Cretaceous, Late Aptian-Cenomanian (108-92 million years
ago)
Size (25.4
mm = 1 inch): Dragonfly fossil has 45 mm wingspan; Head-Body length
35 mm; Matrix: 150 mm by 135 mm
Fossil Site:
Crato Formation, Nova Olinda Member, Ceara, Brazil
Code: GF95
Price: Sold
Description:
The Araripe Basin of Brazil is home to a fantastic array of exquisitely-detailed
Early Cretaceous fossils, some of which have been preserved in
three dimensions. While the entire formation has until the last
decade or so been termed the Santana Formation, David Martill has
separated out the slightly older insect-bearing strata as the Nova
Olinda Member of the Crato Formation. Quarrying operations for
the purposes of obtaining paving stones exposes the remarkable
insect fauna in much the same way that quarrying for lithographic
limestone in Solnhofen has afforded a panoply of wonderfully-preserved
Jurassic fossils in Germany. In addition to the many orders of
insects, spiders, scorpions, decapod crustaceans, and many plants
have been found. Interestingly, to date no pterosaurs or terrestrial
vertebrates have been found, in stark contrast to the overlying
Santana Formation deposits. This specimen is a member of the Odonata
(dragonflies and damselflies). The Odonata a re well-represented
in the fossil record, with some 700 species known. They have their
origin in the proto-Odonates from the Carboniferous. Meganeuropsis
from the Permian of North America, with a 75 cm wingspan, was the
largest insect on record. |
|