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Ein Vierteljahrtausend verschollen: Der Lange'sche Encrinit aus dem Muschelkalk der Querfurter Mulde (Sachsen-Anhalt) -- Syntypus von Encrinus liliiformis Lamarck, 1801.

Authors :
Hagdorn, Hans
Reich, Mike
Gaitzsch, Birgit
Schneider, Jörg
Source :
Journal of Applied & Regional Geology / Zeitschrift der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Geowissenschaften (ZDGG). 2023, Vol. 174 Issue 1, p143-166. 24p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The so-called Lange Encrinite, designated as one of two syntypes of Encrinus liliiformis Lamarck, 1801, was regarded as missing or forgotten since the late 1760s. Only recently the specimen was identified as one of Lamarck's syntypes in the collections of the Bergakademie Freiberg (Saxony). The intricate history of finding, ownership, and research of this iconic crinoid leads to the ideas and thoughts in the time of Enlightenment in Central Germany. According to contemporary witnesses the crinoid was found near Schraplau or Farnstädt respectively (Querfurt Depression, Saxony-Anhalt, Central Germany) about 1740 and was obtained by the Halle professor J. J. Lange. In 1755 it was published by G. W. Knorr in Nuremberg in a large-size copper engraving. As early as in the 1770s the Jena professor and expert in fossils J. E. I. Walch was unable to localise the crinoid despite all his enquiries. Lange had already sold the specimen to the Saxony Oberberghauptmann (chief mining director) Baron von Gartenberg. Afterwards, the Muschelkalk slab probably came from his possession into the local collections shortly before the foundation of the Bergakademie Freiberg (Saxony) in 1765. Several individuals of the brachiopod Tetractinella trigonella on the bedding plane allow to unequivocally assign the finding horizon to the Tetractinella Bed close to the base of the Trochitenkalk Formation. The syntype first mentioned by Lamarck from the Trochitenkalk of the Asse Hill (Lower Saxony) was already described and figured as Fig. 1 on Plate 1 by M. R. Rosinus (1719). This specimen was probably obtained with the collection of von Schlotheim in 1833 by the Berlin Natural History Museum but could not yet be located. However, the crown on his Plate 1, Fig. 2, from the same locality that also belonged to Rosinus's collection is still preserved in the Berlin collection (Quenstedt-Katalog E. 4.). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
German
ISSN :
18601804
Volume :
174
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Applied & Regional Geology / Zeitschrift der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Geowissenschaften (ZDGG)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164565755
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1127/zdgg/2023/0385