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The Largest Ammonite

January 10, 2022

When people think of fossils, what come to mind are the huge dinosaur skeletons that adorn many large natural history museums. Such fossils are rare, but the fossils of smaller species are more abundant. In today's world, simple observation indicates that there are many more smaller animals, such as field mice, than larger animals, such as elephants. One theory suggests that this is a consequence of an animal's habitat requirement. Viewing the Earth's surface as a plane, the number of habitats (and the number of species) should be proportional to 1/L2, where L is the animal's length.

The Cambrian explosion, starting about 541 million years ago, was a time of rapid diversification of organisms, one type being the marine arthropods, the trilobites. Trilobites were among the most successful of early animals, and more than 20,000 trilobite species populated the oceans over a period of more than a quarter billion years. Trilobite fossils are common enough that they can be bought for a few thousand dollars.

Trilobite illustration from Système silurien du centre de la Boh&ecircum;me by Joachim Barrande (1799-1883).

Trilobites Illustration (Plate 3, vol. I, suppl. II) from the 1852 Système silurien du centre de la Bohême by Joachim Barrande (1799-1883).

Barrande was a French paleontologist who published this landmark study of trilobites.

The name, "trilobite," derives from the Greek words τρι- (tri-, "three") and λοβος (lobos, "lobe").

Radioactive trilobites made an appearance in the first Godzilla movie (Godzilla, 1954, Ishiro Honda, Director).[1-3]

(Portion of a Wikimedia Commons image.)


The Cambrian Period ended 485.4 million years ago. About 65 million years later marked the start of the Devonian Period, and also the appearance of ammonites (Ammonoidea) in the fossil record. Ammonites are molluscs belonging to the same Cephalopod class as the octopuses.

Ammonites get their name from the Egyptian god, Amun, whose Latin name is Ammon. Since ammonites are coiled like rams' horns, Pliny the Elder (23-79 A.D.) called ammonite fossils ammonis cornua ("horns of Ammon") because Ammon is usually depicted as wearing rams' horns. Most trilobite genera became extinct during the Late Devonian extinction that started about 375 million years ago. Ammonites became extinct during the same Cretaceous-Paleogene (K–Pg) extinction event (also known as the Cretaceous-Tertiary (K-T) extinction) that killed-off the dinosaurs about 66 million years ago. Ammonite fossils are much more plentiful than trilobite fossils, selling for a tenth the price, a few hundred dollars.

Both trilobites and ammonites existed over a wide range of sizes, from as small as a few millimeters to as large as 60 centimeters for trilobites and several meters for ammonites. A recent open access publication in PLOS by a research team from the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg (Heidelberg, Germany), the Museo del Desierto (Coahuila, Mexico), the University of Portsmouth (Portsmouth, United Kingdom) and the Natural History Museum (London, United Kingdom) examines the ontogeny (the organization and development over its lifespan), evolution, and palaeogeographic distribution of the world’s largest ammonite, Parapuzosia seppenradensis. This larger-than-human-sized ammonite lived during the Lower Campanian Epoch of the Late Cretaceous period, about 75 million years ago.

Lectotype of Parapuzosia seppenradensis from Westfalia, Germany

Lectotype of the ammonite, Parapuzosia seppenradensis, from Westfalia, Germany, collected in 1894 near Seppenrade.

This specimen is at the LWL-Museum for Natural History, Münster, Germany.

The scale line is 100 mm.

(Fig. 1 of ref. 4.[4] Image by Ifrim et al., 2021, PLOS ONE, licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Also found here. Click for larger image.)


The first Parapuzosia seppenradensis ammonite fossil was discovered in 1895.[4] The specimen, discovered near Seppenrade in Westfalia, Germany, had a diameter of 1.74 meters.[4] As can be deduced from the late date of its discovery in the fossil record, fossil findings of this species were exceedingly rare, as were its systematic position and distribution.[4] The present study catalogues 154 specimens of large (less than 1 meter in diameter) to giant (greater than 1 meter in diameter) from the Santonian and lower Campanian.[4] The study was enabled by many new speciemns from England and Mexico, and high-resolution stratigraphy allowed for precise correlation of the occurrences on both sides of the Atlantic.[4]

It's conjectured that this large ammonite species evolved from Parapuzosia leptophylla, which was discovered in 1857.[4] That species had shell diameters of about 1 meter, it flourished near Europe in the early Santonian, and it reached the Gulf of Mexico during the late Santonian.[4] Parapuzosia seppenradensis first appeared just before the Campanian on both sides of the Atlantic.[4] Initially, its diameter was only about 1 m, but it gradually increased in size to diameters of 1.5-1.8 meters in the middle early Campanian.[4] As shown in the figure, Parapuzosia seppenradensis had five ontogenetic growth stages.[4] The gigantism of the species is an outlier in the general trend of size increase for late Cretaceous cephalopods.[4] It's possible that the increase in size of mosasaurs, the top Cretaceous predators, may have driven this size increase.[4]

Shell diameter and associated growth stage in Parapuzosia seppenradensis

Shell diameter and associated growth stage in the ammonite, Parapuzosia seppenradensis.

The specimens were from Mexico, Texas, Montana, England and Germany.

(Simplified version of Fig. 5 of ref. 4,[4] created using Inkscape. Base image by Ifrim et al., 2021, PLOS ONE, licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Click for larger image.)


References:

  1. Godzilla (1954, Ishiro Honda, Director), on the Internet Movie Database.
  2. Akira Ifukube (1914-2006), Godzilla Medley, YouTube Video by Habanerotube, August 11, 2010.
  3. Trilobite Discovery (1954), YouTube video by Spike Genalo, May 26, 2011.
  4. Christina Ifrim, Wolfgang Stinnesbeck, Arturo H. González González, Nils Schorndorf, and Andrew S. Gale, "Ontogeny, evolution and palaeogeographic distribution of the world’s largest ammonite Parapuzosia (P.) seppenradensis (Landois, 1895)," PLOS, November 10, 2021, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258510.

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