Vol.22 No.2

Jenkins, R. G., Kaim, A., Amano, K., Sakurai, K. and Matsubara, K., 2018: A new Miocene whale-fall community dominated by bathymodiolin mussel Adipicola from Hobetsu area, Hokkaido, Japan. Paleontological Research, Vol.22 No.2, 105-111. doi:10.2517/2017PR006. http://www.bioone.org/doi/full/10.2517/2017PR0006

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We report the fourth record of a fossil whale-fall community in Japan. The new material consists of a single whale bone associated mainly by small bathymodiolin mussels, Adipicola sp., found in the Karumai Formation (late middle Miocene–early late Miocene) in the Hobetsu area of Hokkaido, Japan. This association of whale bone and Adipicola sp. and its mode of occurrence resembles the description of some other ancient whale-fall communities dominated by small mussels from the Olympic Peninsula in Washington State (early Oligocene), Shosanbetsu in Hokkaido (early middle Miocene) and Carpineti in northern Italy (middle Miocene) and constitutes an example of a chemosynthesis-based community sustained by whale–fall decay in the Miocene deep sea. The new example extends the Miocene distribution of bathymodiolin dominated whale-fall communities to the northwestern Pacific Ocean.

Yamada, T., Legrand, J. and Nishida, H., 2018: Late Early Cretaceous (Albian) Sasayama Flora from the Sasayama Group in Hyogo Prefecture, Japan. Paleontological Research, Vol.22 No.2, 112-128. 10.2517/2017pr014. https://doi.org/10.2517/2017PR014

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Plant fossils are reported on from the Lower Cretaceous Upper Formation of the Sasayama Group, including the new species Otozamites toshioensoi sp. nov. The Sasayama Flora proposed here is characterized by an abundance of microphyllous conifers such as Brachyphyllum spp. and Pseudofrenelopsis sp., as well as by the rare occurrence of pteridophytes. These floristic components suggest that an arid climate prevailed in the land of the Sasayama Group and that the Ryoseki-type flora, which generally represents the Outer Zone of Japan during the Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous, flourished in the Inner Zone of Japan during the late Early Cretaceous. Albian or Cenomanian ages have previously been proposed for the Upper Formation of the Sasayama Group by radiometric datings, but an Albian age is preferred here in regards to the extremely rare occurrence of possible angiosperms.

Tazawa, J.-I., 2018: Late Devonian Brachiopods from Choanji, South Kitakami Belt, Japan, and Their Stratigraphic Significance. Paleontological Research, Vol.22 No.2, 129-144. 10.2517/2017pr015. https://doi.org/10.2517/2017PR015

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Late Devonian brachiopods from Choanji, South Kitakami Belt, northeastern Japan, are re-examined to determine their age. Two brachiopod assemblages are recognized in the Choanji area. The assemblage from locality CHJ2 in the middle part of the Choanji Formation consists of one species, Desquamatia (Seratrypa) sp., which indicates a Frasnian age. The assemblage from locality CHJ1 in the upper part of the Choanji Formation consists of 13 species in 10 genera, including a new species, Parallelora minatoi sp. nov., and is of late Famennian age. Thus, the Choanji Formation is correlated with the Upper Devonian (Frasnian–upper Famennian), although until quite recently it was considered to be the lowest Carboniferous (Tournaisian) in Japan.

Mörs, T. and Tomida, Y., 2018: Euroxenomys nanus sp. nov., a Minute Beaver (Rodentia, Castoridae) from the Early Miocene of Japan. Paleontological Research, Vol.22 No.2, 145-149. 10.2517/2017pr013. https://doi.org/10.2517/2017PR013

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A recently discovered, incomplete dentary with preserved incisor, premolar and first molar of a minute castorid from the Dota locality, Kani Basin, early Miocene (ca. 18.5 Ma) Nakamura Formation of the Mizunami Group in central Japan, is described as a new species of the trogontheriine beaver Euroxenomys. It represents the first record of Euroxenomys in Asia and one of the oldest records of this genus. Euroxenomys nanus sp. nov. is smaller than the type species, E. minutus from the Miocene of Europe and more hypsodont, but similar in size to E. inconnexus from the Barstovian of Montana. Dota is the first Asian locality with three cooccurring castorids, Youngofiber sinensis, Minocastor godai, and E. nanus.

Ito, A., Aoki, R., Hirayama, R., Yoshida, M., Kon, H. and Endo, H., 2018: The Rediscovery and Taxonomical Reexamination of the Longirostrine Crocodylian from the Pleistocene of Taiwan. Paleontological Research, Vol.22 No.2, 150-155. 10.2517/2017pr016. https://doi.org/10.2517/2017PR016

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A partial crocodylian skull was found among the paleontological collection at the Archaeological Museum, Waseda University in Honjo-shi, Saitama Prefecture. Following a bibliographical survey, this was verified as a specimen reported by Tokunaga as the first known crocodile from Taiwan but then regarded as lost due to World War II. Molten glass debris is attached to the specimen, suggesting that it had been subject to air raids during World War II in May 1945, most likely at the Waseda University campus. Based on its largest seventh maxillary alveoli and the prominent lateral expansion towards the posterior direction, this specimen was identified as Toyotamaphimeia sp.; up to now a single species under this genus has been reported. The discovery demonstrates that this crocodylian genus once had a wide geographical distribution during the Pleistocene.

Sato, T., Konishi, T., Nishimura, T. and Yoshimura, T., 2018: A basal mosasauroid from the Campanian (Upper Cretaceous) of Hokkaido, northern Japan. Paleontological Research, Vol.22 No.2, 156-166. doi:10.2517/2017PR018. http://www.bioone.org/doi/full/10.2517/2017PR018

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A basal mosasauroid specimen, including a rib and a vertebra from middle to posterior portion of the trunk, is reported from the lower Campanian Inoceramus (Platyceramus) japonicus zone in Obira Town, northern Hokkaido, northern Japan. It is the second occurrence of basal mosasauroids sensu lato in Japan after the halisaurine Phosphorosaurus ponpetelegans, but represents a larger individual than the P. ponpetelegans holotype. The Obira specimen predates the early Maastrichtian P. ponpetelegans by about 10 million years, indicating colonization by basal mosasauroids of the northwestern Pacific by at latest the early Campanian age. While the overall morphology of the Obira specimen agrees well with that of a halisaurine vertebra, the presence of well-developed zygantra (zygosphenes missing postmortem if present) on the vertebra and its inclined condyle uniquely align the specimen with Pannoniasaurus inexpectatus, a Santonian-aged basal mosasauroid from freshwater deposits in Hungary.

Yamashita, D., Kato, H., Onoue, T. and Suzuki, N., 2018: Integrated Upper Triassic conodont and radiolarian biostratigraphies of the Panthalassa Ocean. Paleontological Research, Vol.22 No.2, 167-197. doi:10.2517/2017PR020. http://www.bioone.org/doi/full/10.2517/2017PR020

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The Late Triassic conodont biostratigraphy of two pelagic chert sections (sections N and Q) in the Inuyama area, central Japan, was investigated to calibrate the Triassic radiolarian zonation proposed by Sugiyama in 1997 with the conodont zones and the standard Triassic timescale. Based on the stratigraphic distributions of marker species, six conodont zones were defined: the Paragondolella? tadpole interval Zone, the Quadralella tuvalica interval Zone, the Epigondolella quadrata interval Zone, the E. triangularis interval Zone, the Mockina postera interval Zone, and the M. bidentata Zone. These conodont zones are comparable to the standard Carnian and Norian conodont zones of North America and the Tethys. The Carnian-Norian boundary in the sections studied is tentatively placed between the last occurrence of a Carnian species (Q. tuvalica) and the first occurrences of Norian species (E. quadrata and E. spatulata). The intercalibrated conodont–radiolarian biostratigraphy from the sections we studied accurately calibrates the radiolarian zones in Japan with standard chronostratigraphic stages and substages.