Arthropitys

Arthropitys is an extinct genus of calamitacean equisetale. The petrified fossils of Arthropitys bistriata, the type species, can be found at Chemnitz petrified forest, Chemnitz, Germany.

Arthropitys
Temporal range: Sakmarian–Artinskian
A. bistriata fossils from Chemnitz
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Class: Polypodiopsida
Subclass: Equisetidae
Order: Equisetales
Family: Calamitaceae
Genus: Arthropitys
Frenzel, 1751
Species
  • A. bistriata (type) Frenzel, 1751
  • A. deltoides
  • A. .sp
  • A. taoshuyuanensis Chen et al., 2018

History

Petrified trunks of tree ferns, seed ferns, conifers as well as Cordaitales and different species of Calamites. The primeval plants were repeatedly discovered from the 17 century ongoing till today and mostly at Hilbersdorf, today a district of Chemnitz. In the mid-18th century, gemstone prospector David Frenzel (1691-1772) found numerous examples of this wood in the hills in and around Chemnitz. One of his 1751 finds is one of the few petrified wood specimens still possessing its roots. Later a collector, the Hilbersdorf contractor Güldner, bequeathed some of the petrified logs to King Albert Museum in Chemnitz. The first director of the Museum, Johann Traugott Sterzel, took over the investigation of the findings. The Sterzeleanum in the museum (the petrified forest display) is dedicated to him.[1]

Two Arthropitys .sp fossils discovered in Italy
A. bistriata fossils from Chemnitz
Fossils from the petrified forest of Chemnitz in which Arthrophitys .sp is common. Located in Chemnitz occurrence on display in the courtyard of DASTietz and Museum of Natural History Chemnitz
gollark: Oh, now top isn't loading.
gollark: But UPTIME!
gollark: ```(2/8) Reloading system manager configuration...Failed to reload daemon: Transport endpoint is not connectederror: command failed to execute correctly```???
gollark: I did. It doesn't show anything interesting.
gollark: I don't want to reboot since I have 8 weeks of uptime.

References

  1. A forest of precious stones – given by volcanoes – the Sterzeleanum, Museum of Natural History, Chemnitz, retrieved 2013-05-08


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.