Abstract

The world’s largest ammonite, Parapuzosia (P.) seppenradensis (Landois, 1895), fascinated the world ever since the discovery, in 1895, of a specimen of 1.74 metres (m) diameter near Seppenrade in Westfalia, Germany, but subsequent findings of the taxon are exceedingly rare and its systematic position remains enigmatic. Here we revise the historical specimens and document abundant new material from England and Mexico. Our study comprises 154 specimens of large (< 1 m diameter) to giant (> 1m diameter) Parapuzosia from the Santonian and lower Campanian, mostly with stratigraphic information. High-resolution integrated stratigraphy allows for precise cross-Atlantic correlation of the occurrences. Our specimens were analysed regarding morphometry, growth stages and stratigraphic occurrence wherever possible. Our analysis provides insight into the ontogeny of Parapuzosia (P.) seppenradensis and into the evolution of this species from its potential ancestor P. (P.) leptophylla Sharpe, 1857. The latter grew to shell diameters of about 1 m and was restricted to Europe in the early Santonian, but it reached the Gulf of Mexico during the late Santonian. P. (P.) seppenradensis first appears in the uppermost Santonian- earliest Campanian on both sides of the Atlantic. Initially, it also reached diameters of about 1 m, but gradual evolutionary increase in size is seen in the middle early Campanian to diameters of 1.5 to 1.8 m. P. (P.) seppenradensis is characterized by five ontogenetic growth stages and by size dimorphism. We therefore here include the many historic species names used in the past to describe the morphological and size variability of the taxon. The concentration of adult shells in small geographic areas and scarcity of Parapuzosia in nearby coeval outcrop regions may point to a monocyclic, possibly even semelparous reproduction strategy in this giant cephalopod. Its gigantism exceeds a general trend of size increase in late Cretaceous cephalopods. Whether the coeval increase in size of mosasaurs, the top predators in Cretaceous seas, caused ecological pressure on Parapuzosia towards larger diameters remains unclear.

Highlights

  • The lectotype of the world’s largest ammonite, Parapuzosia (P.) seppenradensis (Fig 1), is exhibited at the entrance of the Museum of Natural History (Landesnaturkundemuseum) in Munster (LWL), but replicas of this original reaching 1.74 m diameter are displayed in many museums worldwide

  • The other giant species is P.(P.) seppenradensis (Landois, 1895) [1] which grew to 1.50 m shell diameter and even to ca 1.80 m as seen in the lectotype

  • The present analysis of giant Parapuzosia is based on 11 Santonian specimens of P. (P.) leptophylla and 143 latest Santonian to early Campanian individuals of P. (P.) seppenradensis, with preserved diameters of 0.1–1.8 m

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The lectotype of the world’s largest ammonite, Parapuzosia (P.) seppenradensis (Fig 1), is exhibited at the entrance of the Museum of Natural History (Landesnaturkundemuseum) in Munster (LWL), but replicas of this original reaching 1.74 m diameter are displayed in many museums worldwide. The specimen has not been compared to other Parapuzosia species due to the scarcity of specimens with comparable size [1,2,3]. 154 specimens from the UK, France, Germany, North America are included for the present review, among them all historic specimens from Europe and the US and abundant new material from England and Mexico. Diameters range from 0.1 m to 1.80 m, allowing us to study the complete ontogeny of Parapuzosia (P.) seppenradensis up to its maximum size

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call